Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction: Theorising the Victim
- 1 Opening the Gate: Reconfiguring the Child Victim in Stranger Things
- 2 Black Death: Black Victims in 1980s Teen Slashers
- 3 Beyond Binaries: The Position of the Transgender Victim in Horror Narratives
- 4 Through the Looking-Glass: The Gothic Victim in Jordan Peele’s Us
- 5 Postmortem Victimhood: Necrovalue in Phantasm and Dead and Buried
- 6 The Sad Killer: Perpetuating Spaces, Trauma and Violencewithin the Slasher Genre
- 7 “If this is the last thing you see… that means I died”: A Taxonomy of Camera-Operating Victims in Found Footage Horror Films
- 8 Victimhood and Rhetorical Dialectics within Clive Barker’s Faustian Fiction
- 9 Pain Index, Plain Suffering and Blood Measure: A Victimology of Driving Safety Films, 1955–1975
- 10 Biolithic Horror: Stone Victim/Victimisers in Resident Evil Village
- 11 The Potential Victim: Horror Role-Playing Games and the Cruelty of Things
- Bibliography
- Filmography
- Index
8 - Victimhood and Rhetorical Dialectics within Clive Barker’s Faustian Fiction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 March 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction: Theorising the Victim
- 1 Opening the Gate: Reconfiguring the Child Victim in Stranger Things
- 2 Black Death: Black Victims in 1980s Teen Slashers
- 3 Beyond Binaries: The Position of the Transgender Victim in Horror Narratives
- 4 Through the Looking-Glass: The Gothic Victim in Jordan Peele’s Us
- 5 Postmortem Victimhood: Necrovalue in Phantasm and Dead and Buried
- 6 The Sad Killer: Perpetuating Spaces, Trauma and Violencewithin the Slasher Genre
- 7 “If this is the last thing you see… that means I died”: A Taxonomy of Camera-Operating Victims in Found Footage Horror Films
- 8 Victimhood and Rhetorical Dialectics within Clive Barker’s Faustian Fiction
- 9 Pain Index, Plain Suffering and Blood Measure: A Victimology of Driving Safety Films, 1955–1975
- 10 Biolithic Horror: Stone Victim/Victimisers in Resident Evil Village
- 11 The Potential Victim: Horror Role-Playing Games and the Cruelty of Things
- Bibliography
- Filmography
- Index
Summary
Abstract
Employing the philosophy of Georges Bataille, this chapter examines victimised characters within Clive Barker’s 1980s works The Damnation Game, The Hellbound Heart and Books of Blood short story “Sex, Death and Starshine.” These three works provide arenas for Barker’s main characters—and readers—to experience competitive coexistence of self and other, survival and death, and ecstasy and suffering. The works persuade readers to flirt with Faustian risk and become willing victims through the act of reading. Suffering through the dark fiction, readers engage with Barker’s dialectics by befriending characters (and Barker himself) via the text. The chapter argues that this type of victimhood-friendship contributes to the effectiveness of Barker’s literary rhetoric.
Keywords: literature, The Damnation Game, The Hellbound Heart, friendship, Georges Bataille, transhumanism
Faustian fiction—that is, stories of human characters who negotiate with devils to acquire power and knowledge—have been retold and reshaped throughout the centuries. They are based on an historical sixteenth-century magician, Dr Johann Faustus, who was suspected of consorting with the devil; accordingly, the fiction traces the character of Doctor Faustus/Faust (or a Faust-like character) interacting with a demon character, traditionally named Mephistopheles. Christopher Marlowe’s Tragicall Historie of Doctor Faustus (c. 1592) and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s Faust (Part I, 1808; Part II, 1838) are two foundational versions of Faustian tales that are celebrated in the Western literary canon. Despite their thematic similarities, such as unmoderated desire, the limitations of human knowing and the betrayal of natural order, the two stories significantly diverge: Marlowe’s tale ends with Faust’s eternal damnation, while Goethe’s tale ends with his redemption. Within the sphere of contemporary horror fiction, Clive Barker admits that his long career of writing horror literature remains indebted to these Faustian texts, specifically, Marlowe’s bleaker Doctor Faustus (Barker, Damnation, xiii). The influence is evidenced throughout Barker’s corpus: from his first theatre productions in 1970s London to his 2015 novel The Scarlet Gospels. As a horror writer, Barker preserves the Faustian tradition in his stories but imaginatively develops the darker elements.
Over the decades, Barker’s approach to Faustian fiction aligns with a particular philosophy of storytelling.
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- Re-Imagining the Victim in Post-1970s Horror Media , pp. 153 - 170Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2024