Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
4. Mother’s Grudge and Woman’s Wail: The Monster-Mother and Korean Horror Film
-
Eunha Oh
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgements vii
- Foreword viii
- Contributors xi
- Introduction 1
-
Part I: Classic Korean Horror
- 1. Family, Death and the wonhon in Four Films of the 1960s 23
- 2. Creepy Liver-Eating Fox Ladies: The Thousand Year Old Fox and Korea’s Gumiho 35
- 3. War Horror and Anti-Communism: From Piagol to Rainy Days 48
- 4. Mother’s Grudge and Woman’s Wail: The Monster-Mother and Korean Horror Film 60
-
Part II: Contemporary ‘Domestic’ Horror
- 5. Heritage of Horrors: Reclaiming the Female Ghost in Shadows in the Palace 73
- 6. Acacia and Adoption Anxiety in Korean Horror Cinema 87
- 7. Apartment Horror: Sorum and Possessed 101
- 8. The Face(s) of Korean Horror Film: Toward a Cinematic Physiognomy of Affective Extremes 114
- 9. Death Bell and High-School Horror 131
-
Part III: Contemporary ‘International’ Horror
- 10. Between the Local and the Global: ‘Asian Horror’ in Ahn Byung-ki’s Phone and Bunshinsaba 145
- 11. Diary of a Lost Girl: Victoriana, Intertextuality and A Tale of Two 158
- 12. From A Tale of Two Sisters to The Uninvited: A Tale of Two Texts 173
- 13. Oldboy goes to Bollywood: Zinda and the Transnational Appropriation of South Korean ‘Extreme’ Cinema 187
- 14. Park Chan-wook’s Thirst: Body, Guilt and Exsanguination 199
- Glossary 217
- Bibliography 219
- Index 236
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgements vii
- Foreword viii
- Contributors xi
- Introduction 1
-
Part I: Classic Korean Horror
- 1. Family, Death and the wonhon in Four Films of the 1960s 23
- 2. Creepy Liver-Eating Fox Ladies: The Thousand Year Old Fox and Korea’s Gumiho 35
- 3. War Horror and Anti-Communism: From Piagol to Rainy Days 48
- 4. Mother’s Grudge and Woman’s Wail: The Monster-Mother and Korean Horror Film 60
-
Part II: Contemporary ‘Domestic’ Horror
- 5. Heritage of Horrors: Reclaiming the Female Ghost in Shadows in the Palace 73
- 6. Acacia and Adoption Anxiety in Korean Horror Cinema 87
- 7. Apartment Horror: Sorum and Possessed 101
- 8. The Face(s) of Korean Horror Film: Toward a Cinematic Physiognomy of Affective Extremes 114
- 9. Death Bell and High-School Horror 131
-
Part III: Contemporary ‘International’ Horror
- 10. Between the Local and the Global: ‘Asian Horror’ in Ahn Byung-ki’s Phone and Bunshinsaba 145
- 11. Diary of a Lost Girl: Victoriana, Intertextuality and A Tale of Two 158
- 12. From A Tale of Two Sisters to The Uninvited: A Tale of Two Texts 173
- 13. Oldboy goes to Bollywood: Zinda and the Transnational Appropriation of South Korean ‘Extreme’ Cinema 187
- 14. Park Chan-wook’s Thirst: Body, Guilt and Exsanguination 199
- Glossary 217
- Bibliography 219
- Index 236