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Syllabuzz: ENG 2701A Horror Film and Literature

English Lecturer Lina Kuhn introduces students to the horror genre through vampire films and literature.

A spooky church graveyard on a misty Winter morning

For more than a century, horror films have captured people鈥檚 imagination. But what about this art form is unique, and why does the genre continue to fascinate us? Lecturer in English Lina Kuhn is exploring this and other questions as part of her new course, ENG 2701A: Horror Film and Literature, by looking across countries and time periods to discover commonalities and divergences in horror works.

鈥淸Horror] is a genre that is a form of escapism and that deeply reflects everything about our reality,鈥 says Kuhn. 鈥淚t allows us to confront all sorts of social, cultural and historical issues but at a remove that makes it a little bit easier to digest.鈥

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Students in the course are reading 鈥淒racula鈥 by Bram Stoker and 鈥淔ledgling鈥 by Octavia Butler as well as other assorted texts. They compare them with essential vampire films. Kuhn plans to theme each semester differently based on horror tropes. This semester鈥檚 theme 鈥 鈥淣osferatu and His Shadows鈥 鈥 celebrates the 100th anniversary of the first vampire movie. Kuhn felt this theme was also timely because 鈥淣osferatu鈥 deals with racism, sexuality, pandemics and many other conversations relevant today.

鈥淲hat is important about horror is that it gives us an outlet to explore what it means to be human and what humanity entails,鈥 she says. Exploring the genre allows students to confront taboos and fears at a safe distance.

Kuhn chose to bring horror to the Elon community at an introductory level to allow students with less literature or film experience to benefit from this outlet. To involve students further in their own learning, Kuhn tasks them with developing their own discussion questions for the media they are consuming.

鈥淗aving a topic like vampires allows students to start thinking about close reading and start thinking about literary analysis in a way that is still extremely fun and exciting,鈥 she says.

福利亚洲国产精品 the Professor:

Lecturer in English Lina Kuhn received her doctorate in comparative literature from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She specializes in 20th-century American and German literature and film; first-year writing; science and the humanities; horror; and science fiction.

Suggested Materials:

  • 鈥淒racula鈥 by Bram Stoker
  • 鈥淔ledgling鈥 by Octavia Butler
  • 鈥淎 Girl Walks Home Alone at Night鈥 by Ana Lily Amirpour (2014)
  • 鈥淣osferatu鈥 by F. W. Murnau (1922)