Horror fiction Essays

  • R. L. Spine Tingling Stine, Writer of Horror Fiction

    1178 Words  | 3 Pages

    R.L. Stine is best recognized as one of the finest writers of horror fiction, an achievement he reached using vivid imagination and creativity, despite having very little horrifying life experiences. Throughout his lifetime, Stine has won many awards for all of his popular horror fiction series. Stine has never really faced hardships that have allowed him to write his horror novels, he bases his work on realistic possibilities. Somehow, R.L. Stine still seems to keep his readers on the edge of their

  • Science and Horror Fiction: One and the Same?

    582 Words  | 2 Pages

    science and horror fiction are grouped together under the general category of science fiction. This seems to be common among literature in terms of convenience of organization, however, it truly is inaccurate and the two classifications should not be grouped as one. While each genre may interweave elements of the other into the piece, they each have their own set of rules, and therefore, they should each be considered separate. There is one primary reason why science fiction and horror are not one

  • Exploring the Film Genres of Horror, Science Fiction, and Action Movies

    814 Words  | 2 Pages

    What makes people fascinated and amused to watch movies? I think all kinds of movies are, in there own way, great. Practically the excitement of horror movies, and science and technology of science fiction movies, and action and enthusiasm in the action movies are some credits that makes people’s engrossment. Even so could all movies create an entertainment and make people experience their thoughts of imaginations in the real world. What are the most interesting things about these film genres, which

  • The Strange Case of Dr.Jekyll and Mr Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson as a Work of Horror Fiction

    2947 Words  | 6 Pages

    The Strange Case of Dr.Jekyll and Mr Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson as a Work of Horror Fiction Horror fiction in the 21st century has evolved far from its origins, to the extent where classic horror novels of the Victorian Era are considered to be parodies of how people perceive horror today. The novel 'The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde", which stands alongside classics such as Dracula and Frankenstein, is a powerful ethical symbol that suggests the shadowy nature of human personality

  • The Formulaic and Episodic X-Files and Supernatural

    1337 Words  | 3 Pages

    eds. 2005. The Contemporary Television Series. Edinburgh: Edinburg University Press, pp.159-182. Hodges, L., 2008. Mainstreaming Marginality: Genre, Hybridity, and Postmodernism in The X-Files. In: J. P. Tellote, ed. 2008. The Essential Science Fiction Television Reader. Kentucky: Kentucky University Press, pp.231-246. Mittel, J., 2007. Film and Television Narrative. In: D. Herman, ed. 2007. The Cambridge Companion to Narrative. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp.156-171. Mittell, J., 2006

  • Parallelism between Death and Evil

    1185 Words  | 3 Pages

    “The Masque of the Red Death” is a story written by Edgar Alan Poe. He is a writer who centered his writing career on fiction and macabre stories (Digital). “The Masque of the Red Death” is one of those stories. Poe’s Romantic ideology uses the seven chambers as a symbol of death and evil to apply the Still Life “Vanitas” genre and use it as the focus not only for the setting of the story, but also to teach the reader how an individual with a power position can forget morality by getting attached

  • The Horror of Pity and War in Regeneration by Pat Barker and Collective Poems of Wilfred Owen

    2135 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Horror of Pity and War in Regeneration by Pat Barker and Collective Poems of Wilfred Owen Through reading ‘Regeneration’ by Pat Barker and Wilfred Owen’s collection of poems, we see both writers present the horror and pity of World War I in an effective way. ‘Regeneration’ shows us a personal account of shell-shocked officer’s experience in the war. This links with Wilfred Owen’s poems as they too show how war affects the soldiers. Even though ‘Regeneration’ (a prose piece) and Wilfred

  • Frankenstein and the Moral Dilemmas of Today

    734 Words  | 2 Pages

    Frankenstein has been a classic for many years, and for many years to come. It strikes me to be one of the few horror stories one can actually read without vomiting, and instead, sympathize with. The book deals with a handful of things, as the moral dilemmas of interfering with nature. But, is it possible to connect this horror story with today's society? As we read the story about the man Frankenstein and his creation – it is often described as if he's making a monster. He puts together a man,

  • Critical Criticism Of Frankenstein

    1207 Words  | 3 Pages

    Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein as a response to a contest put forth by Lord Byron and her husband, Percy Shelley. The challenge was to write a horror story. Fittingly, her novel was influenced by the discussion they were having regarding the nature of life, referring to Darwin’s theory of Evolution, and the possibility of creating a creature. As a result, she wrote about a curious minded individual, Victor Frankenstein, assembling a creature with human parts and giving it life. The creature

  • How Does Edgar Allen Poe Create a Feeling of Madness Throughout "the Tell-Tale Heart"?

    1094 Words  | 3 Pages

    Edgar Allen Poe was an American Writer who wrote within the genre of horror and science fiction. He was famous for writing psychologically thrilling tales examining the depths of the human psyche. This is true of the Tell-Tale Heart, where Poe presents a character that appears to be mad because of his obsession to an old mans, ‘vulture eye’. Poe had a tragic life from a young age when his parents died. This is often reflected in his stories, showing characters with a mad state of mind, and in the

  • The Significance of Chapter 5 in Frankenstein by Mary Shelley

    1761 Words  | 4 Pages

    remains may afford no light to any curious and unhallowed wretch, who would create such another as I have been" (Chapter 24, pg 224) In this way the novel ends on the course of despair that it began in Chapter five. This was with rejection and horror of the creation that was 'man made'. This suspicion of 'playing with God' is as relevant today as humans argue over issues such as 'cloning' and 'designer babies'.

  • American Horror Story Analysis

    1507 Words  | 4 Pages

    American Horror Story was created by Ryan Murphy. The series, which is still airing to this day, aired on October 5, 2011. This series uses crude comedy that is full of adult innuendos. In each season, the viewer experiences a different theme and setting. The first season is centered on a man, his wife, and their home. The second season is centered on an insane asylum and its patients. The third season is centered on a coven of witches in New Orleans. The fourth season is centered on a circus. The

  • House of Horrors: A Tale of Unfathomable Crime

    1036 Words  | 3 Pages

    “House of Horrors”. The residents there were in disbelief that this unimaginable crime spree had been going on in their town for 20 years. The Trial As it turned

  • Stephen King

    854 Words  | 2 Pages

    Stephen King is one of the most respected and well known men to ever write horror stories, behind Edgar Allen Poe of course. Stephen King is very famous all around the world for his novels such as It, Halloween, Carrie, The Shining, Pet Cemetery, as well as another amazing fifty-nine other novels. I have only read three of Kings books, Carrie, Pet Cemetery, and The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon, which I have selected for my book report. Personally The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon was my least favorite,

  • Examples Of Insanity In The Tell Tale Heart

    1132 Words  | 3 Pages

    In Edger Allen Poe’s short story, “The Tale-Tell Heart” he describes a man who has become obsessed with an old man’s eye who lives within the same building as him. He describes himself as someone who is not mad, however, the choice of the narrator’s diction suggests otherwise. He slowly watches the man every night as he sleeps, expressing how “caution” he goes about hiding in the shadows, careful not to strike too soon. As the story progresses, his madness begins to show more, as he plans for his

  • The Pit and the Pendulum by Edgar Allan Poe

    1291 Words  | 3 Pages

    death sentence and by couching these events in apocalyptic imagery, Poe heralds the narrator's, and hence the reader's, entrance into a nightmare world of punishment, dissolution, and death, an announcement amply fulfilled by the violence, pain, and horror experienced by the narrator in his prison cell. Although its presence is less immediately apparent in the tale, the Book of Revelation also sets forth the promise of salvation; the eternal life granted the fait... ... middle of paper ... ...emingly

  • The Importance Of Scientific Discovery In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

    1295 Words  | 3 Pages

    The science is outdated and Frankenstein should not be studying something so unmoral. The fact that Mary Shelley put so many people in the novel that discouraged Frankenstein shows her disapproval of science and the Frankenstein didn’t realize the horror of his creation until it was alive. Walton on the other hand realizes that sometimes you have to turn around. His response to Victor at the end was: “’Alas! Yes; I cannot withstand their demands. I cannot lead them unwillingly to danger, and I must

  • Stephen King´s Carrie

    1038 Words  | 3 Pages

    reflects the horror genre. The specific example he used was the imagery of the "tortured and bleeding Jesus hanging from the walls"(Calvert) in the house. This image reminds me of the other imagery of Margaret abusing Carrie physically and psychologically. Works Cited Calvert Steve. "Carrie". Steve Calvert. Np. Nd. Web. 6 Nov 2013. Kafka Josie. "Lost Lit: Stephen King's Carrie". Doux Reviews. Np. 2009. Web. 6 Nov 2013. Palmer Trever. "Carrie, by Stephen King Review by Trever Palmer". Horror Drive-In

  • The Effectiveness of The Monkey's Paw

    3013 Words  | 7 Pages

    reflects these changes in the society and shows us how an innocent world could be destroyed by the power of greed. The Monkey's paw would have been this effective of a story in its time because I think it had everything that needs to be in a horror story of anytime and I am going to show that in my essay. This story is written in the time when people didn't have a lot of social life, they were not highly educated and just had simple things as there pleasures and they were honest people

  • Perception of the Unknown Should Be Sympathetically Good

    926 Words  | 2 Pages

    lives they lead are insightful. King creating horror stories and telling his readers why they love them is entertaining. So a good perception is key to staying sane and discovering the unknown in the safest way. Works Cited Neilub, Janice, Kathleen Shine Cain, and Stephen Ruffus, eds. English Mercury Reader. Boston: Pearson Learning Solutions, 2013. Print. Dillard, Annie. “Seeing.” Neilub, Cain, and Ruffus 414. King, Stephen. “Why We Crave Horror Stories.” Neilub, Cain, and Ruffus 522. Plato