Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: From Belles to Bayous: The Fall of the South on Screen
- Section One The South in the Cultural Imaginary
- Section Two Gothic Visions, Southern Stories
- Section Three The Southern Gothic on Screen
- Section Four Case Studies: Toys in the Attic and Searching for the Wrong-Eyed Jesus
- Conclusion – Fading, But Never Faded
- Bibliography
- Filmography
- Television Series
- Songs
- Video Games
- Websites
- Index
Conclusion – Fading, But Never Faded
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2022
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: From Belles to Bayous: The Fall of the South on Screen
- Section One The South in the Cultural Imaginary
- Section Two Gothic Visions, Southern Stories
- Section Three The Southern Gothic on Screen
- Section Four Case Studies: Toys in the Attic and Searching for the Wrong-Eyed Jesus
- Conclusion – Fading, But Never Faded
- Bibliography
- Filmography
- Television Series
- Songs
- Video Games
- Websites
- Index
Summary
Abstract
The conclusion reaffirms the book's key premise that the crumbling mansions, decaying vegetation, doom-laden atmospheres, and ruined landscapes of the Southern Gothic speak to its positioning on screen as an othered space. It reflects upon the way in which screen depictions of the contemporary South, refracted through the historical and cultural discourses of a grander more glorious South, have emerged in screen texts to demonstrate an undeniable consistency, identifiable despite the unstable model of categorization in and around which those texts function as genre.
Keywords: Mason-Dixon Line, North, South, Genre, Classification
In Episode One, Season One of HBO's True Detective, under a southern sky thick with gathering storm clouds, detectives Rust Cohle and Marty Hart exit a coroner's office on the outskirts of Erath, Louisiana. Situated in a strip mall in an area edged by swamps and oil refineries, the coroner's office seems the only functioning business in the deserted mall where shuttered storefronts and a near deserted car park evoke the ruin and desolation of a permanently forsaken South. Structured by a Gothicity that imagines Erath as a counterpart to Ambrose Bierce's fictional Carcosa with its “hint of evil,” and “dismal landscape” over which “lead-coloured clouds” hang like a “visible curse” (Bierce 2003), the strip mall is heavy with a sense of doom that is never alleviated by any peripheral signs of life. “This place is like somebody's memory of a town, and the memory's fading,” Rust observes. And in Rust's evocation of a fading South, the Southern Gothic is perhaps most perfectly elucidated.
This book set out to explore the Southern Gothic on screen. Through an emphasis on genre, or rather, through an attempt to interrogate the Southern Gothic as a screen genre, this book has focused on the cohesiveness of a certain group of film and television texts in which Gothicity is the dominant mechanism through which the South is rendered Other. The othering of the South is a phenomenon that traverses historical, cultural, political, and representational terrain. Importantly, the construct of the othered South cannot be understood simply as a one-way assignation that positions the South in opposition to the North due to the South's perceived backwardness and inferiority in the broader national context.
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- The American Southern Gothic on Screen , pp. 201 - 208Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2022