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8 Azougue Nazaré: Religious Intolerance in a Secular Country
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations viii
- List of Contributors xii
- Foreword xvi
- Preface xx
- Acknowledgements xxiii
- Introduction: Contemporary Screen Horror in Brazil 1
-
Part 1: The Reemergence of Brazilian Horror in the Twenty-first Century
- 1 Te Return of Coffin Joe: Embodiment of Evil and Contemporary Brazilian Horror Cinema 25
- 2 A Time-Traveller’s Guide to a Country of Horrors: A Study of Past, Present and Future Reimagined in Brazilian Cinema 41
-
Part 2: Brazilian “Post-Horror”
- 3 Hard Labor and Kill Me Please: Key Moments of Middle-Class Horror in Brazil 57
- 4 Reckoning with the Future: Fear, Resentment and Social Monsters in Neighbouring Sounds 73
-
Part 3: The Curse of Urban Violence in Brazil
- 5 A Glance Trough the Window: Te Working Class and its Discontents in Te Tenants 91
- 6 Mormaço, Mould and Malaise: Bodies and Urban Space in Confict 106
-
Part 4: Folk-Horror Brazilian-Style
- 7 Folk Horror in Unsoul and Te Famous and the Dead 123
- 8 Azougue Nazaré: Religious Intolerance in a Secular Country 143
-
Part 5: Race, Gender and Brazil’s Colonial Past
- 9 Plantation Hauntings in Te Devil’s Knot 159
- 10 Good Manners: Colonialism and Structural Racism in Brazilian Horror Cinema 174
-
Part 6: Social Cannibalism
- 11 Always Feeding Of the Poor: Sex, Blood and Class Struggle in Te Cannibal Club 195
- 12 A Cordial Murder: Horror and Social Tensions in Friendly Beast 209
-
Part 7: Teen Horror on Screen
- 13 Te Joy: Brazilian Teen Horror Fuelled by Boredom 225
- 14 Te Young Baumanns: Nostalgia, Ruins and Images of a Country in a State of Latency 240
-
Part 8: Tropical Dystopias
- 15 We are Born in Flames: Living with Ghosts, Revamping Pasts and Futures in Tremor Iê 255
- 16 Bacurau Flies at Dusk: Film, Viral Cultural Politics, COVID-19, Hauntings and Futures 272
- Index 291
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations viii
- List of Contributors xii
- Foreword xvi
- Preface xx
- Acknowledgements xxiii
- Introduction: Contemporary Screen Horror in Brazil 1
-
Part 1: The Reemergence of Brazilian Horror in the Twenty-first Century
- 1 Te Return of Coffin Joe: Embodiment of Evil and Contemporary Brazilian Horror Cinema 25
- 2 A Time-Traveller’s Guide to a Country of Horrors: A Study of Past, Present and Future Reimagined in Brazilian Cinema 41
-
Part 2: Brazilian “Post-Horror”
- 3 Hard Labor and Kill Me Please: Key Moments of Middle-Class Horror in Brazil 57
- 4 Reckoning with the Future: Fear, Resentment and Social Monsters in Neighbouring Sounds 73
-
Part 3: The Curse of Urban Violence in Brazil
- 5 A Glance Trough the Window: Te Working Class and its Discontents in Te Tenants 91
- 6 Mormaço, Mould and Malaise: Bodies and Urban Space in Confict 106
-
Part 4: Folk-Horror Brazilian-Style
- 7 Folk Horror in Unsoul and Te Famous and the Dead 123
- 8 Azougue Nazaré: Religious Intolerance in a Secular Country 143
-
Part 5: Race, Gender and Brazil’s Colonial Past
- 9 Plantation Hauntings in Te Devil’s Knot 159
- 10 Good Manners: Colonialism and Structural Racism in Brazilian Horror Cinema 174
-
Part 6: Social Cannibalism
- 11 Always Feeding Of the Poor: Sex, Blood and Class Struggle in Te Cannibal Club 195
- 12 A Cordial Murder: Horror and Social Tensions in Friendly Beast 209
-
Part 7: Teen Horror on Screen
- 13 Te Joy: Brazilian Teen Horror Fuelled by Boredom 225
- 14 Te Young Baumanns: Nostalgia, Ruins and Images of a Country in a State of Latency 240
-
Part 8: Tropical Dystopias
- 15 We are Born in Flames: Living with Ghosts, Revamping Pasts and Futures in Tremor Iê 255
- 16 Bacurau Flies at Dusk: Film, Viral Cultural Politics, COVID-19, Hauntings and Futures 272
- Index 291