The Phantom of the Media: Erik, the 'Gesamtkunstwerk', and the spectacle of unsettlement
Very much a first draft. Presented as a paper at the 'Staging Illusion: Digital and Cultural Fantasy' conference, Sussex Centre for Cultural Studies, University of Sussex, 8-9 December 2011.
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Seen by:Maternal Legacy in FRANKENSTEIN (2004)
Institute for the Psychological Study of the Arts Conference paper, Arles, France, 2004
Victor Frankenstein as a creator is motivated by his mother's legacy, which involves not only reviving her... more Victor Frankenstein as a creator is motivated by his mother's legacy, which involves not only reviving her symbolically from the dead but also overcoming her secret disgrace. Kenneth Branagh's film joins together Justine and Elizabeth in a radical alteration of the climax to Shelley’s novel, a masculine defense taking the form of identification with powerful father figures against the threat of castration implied by a persistent maternal imago.
Gothic Science Fiction and the Biopolitics of Empire
in _Gothic Science Fiction_ eds. Sara Wasson & Emily Alder (Liverpool: Liverpool UP, 2011)
While seemingly antithetical genres, the Gothic and Science Fiction have mutually influenced each other many times... more
While seemingly antithetical genres, the Gothic and Science Fiction have mutually influenced each other many times during their historical development, to such an extent that one might claim for the emergence of a hybrid genre of ‘Gothic SF’ since the late 1970s. My thesis is that this peculiar relationship between the two genres may be interpreted in terms of their shared preoccupations with contemporary political and biopolitical discourses. To elucidate, the two genres have interacted with each other more prominently during periods when imperial discourses have developed more sophisticated ways of exercising power, not through repressive and coercive mechanisms, but by preserving, monitoring, even creating human life itself – what Michel Foucault refers to as ‘biopower’. It is for this reason that the first period to witness a considerable interaction between the two genres is the late nineteenth century. This is the moment of increased imperial competition and jingoistic patriotism, of the so-called ‘high noon imperialism’. It is also the time when, according to Foucault, modern biopower emerged, through an increasing politicisation of the sciences, that turned ‘health’ and ‘disease’ into a matter of political preoccupation. And it is the time of early SF texts such as H.G. Wells’s War of the Worlds, which translates imperial conflict into evolutionary survival of the fittest and biological warfare.
From its beginnings, then, the Gothic SF subgenre has responded to the interlocking of the political with the biopolitical. My focus, however, will be on late-twentieth-century narratives and while I may be making brief references to other narratives, such as the Alien films, the Blade trilogy, or The X-Files, I will be mainly discussing the Star Trek storyline featuring the race of the Borg. The combination of Gothic motifs, such as their vampire-like ability to transform other individuals into ‘drones’, and SF elements, such as their cybernetic implants, has allowed the creators to represent a new form of imperialism that locates itself at the human body itself. From a more theoretical perspective, I will be comparing the Borg with what Antonio Negri and Michael Hardt have called ‘Empire’, a decentred mode of global imperial control that operates through communication networks, a system that represents ‘the paradigmatic form of biopower’, one whose power is exercised ‘through machines that directly organise the brains (in communication systems, information networks, etc.) and bodies (in welfare systems, monitored activities, etc.)’ (Hardt and Negri 2000: 24, 23). It is with regard to the strong biopolitical nature of Empire that I will be discussing the increasing association of the Borg with viruses and of their ‘assimilation’ with infection throughout the years. In addition, I will be interpreting the show’s representation of the Borg as the ‘ultimate villain’ of Star Trek with regard to Hardt and Negri’s argument that the United States is losing its prominence in this new system of global control that has come to replace traditional imperialist practices. The Borg storyline will thus be shown as representative of the ability of the Gothic SF genre to represent and comment on the emergence of new modes of biopolitical control at the advent of the Information Revolution and globalisation.
“007 meets Van Helsing: James Bond and Contemporary Gothic Visual Culture.”
IN: The Cultures of James Bond. Ed. Joachim Frenk and Christian Krug. Trier: WVT, 2011.
The Bond series has not only traditionally made use of the Gothic mode, but it has also influenced the Gothic in its... more
The Bond series has not only traditionally made use of the Gothic mode, but it has also influenced the Gothic in its turn. Taking my cue from the Alan Moore’s graphic novel The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (vol.1, 1999), its filmic adaptation (2003) and the film Van Helsing (2004), I will discuss the ways in which the character of Bond and the Bond formula have made their entry into contemporary Gothic visual culture.
As the many intertextual references to Bond in both versions of The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen make clear, James Bond has become a role model, a figure other popular-cultural texts draw on and fall back to in gestures of either imitation, subversion or parody. Furthermore, the references to Bond serve to link the texts mentioned above, which are all set in the late Victorian Age, to the popular culture of late the 20th and early 21st centuries. Concentrating in more detail on Van Helsing, which establishes an exceptionally prominent Bondian subtext, I will read this film as conflating the narrative and ideological scripts of both Bond and Stoker’s Dracula. I will argue that the combined use of Bond and Gothic mode enables the film to criticise the re-introduction of the categories of good and evil as an allegedly stable binary difference into early 21st-century western Realpolitik.

