Acknowledgements
Contributors
1.Introduction: Conceptualizations, Mediations, and Remediations of
the American Weird
Julius Greve (University of Oldenburg) and Florian Zappe
(University of Göttingen)
Part One: Concept
2. A Doxa of the American Weird
Dan O'Hara (Independent Scholar, UK)
3. The Oozy Set: Toward a Weird(ed) Taxonomy
Johnny Murray (Independent Scholar, UK)
4. Validating Weird Fiction as an (Im)Possible Genre
Anne-Maree Wicks (University of Southern Queensland, Australia)
5. Woke Weird and the Cultural Politics of Camp Transformation
Stephen Shapiro (University of Warwick, UK)
6. The Weird in/of Crisis, 1930/2010
Tim Lanzendörfer (University of Frankfurt, Germany)
7. After Weird: Harman, Deleuze, and the American "Thing"
Daniel D. Fineman (Occidental College, USA)
8. Concerning A Deleuzean Weird: A Response to Dan Fineman
Graham Harman (Southern California Institute of Architecture,
USA)
Part Two: Medium
9. Get Out, Race and Formal Destiny (on Common Weirdness)
Eugenie Brinkema (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA)
10. From a Heap of Broken Images Towards a Postcolonial Weird: Ana
Lily Amirpour’s Western Landscapes
Maryam Aras (University of Bonn, Germany)
11. “It is in Our House Now”: Twin Peaks, Nostalgia, and David
Lynch's Weird Spaces
Oliver Moisich and Markus Wierschem (University of Paderborn,
Germany)
12. Demolishing the Blues: Captain Beefheart as Modernist
Outsider
Paul Sheehan (Macquarie University, Australia)
13. Weird Visual Mythopoeia: On Matthew Barney's Cremaster
Cycle
Florian Zappe (University of Göttingen, Germany)
14. Hidden Cultures and the Representation and Creation of Weird
Reality in Alan Moore's Providence
Alexander Greiffenstern (Independent Scholar, Germany)
15. Alien Beauty: The Glamour of the Eerie
Fred Francis (Independent Scholar, UK)
16. Conspiracy Hermeneutics: The Secret World as Weird Tale
Tanya Krzywinska (Falmouth University, UK)
17. Afterword: Weird in the Walls
Roger Luckhurst (Birkbeck, University of London, UK)
Index
The first comprehensive, interdisciplinary study on the genre of the American Weird, exploring its concept and various representations across literature, film, television and music.
Julius Greve is a lecturer and research associate at the
Institute for English and American Studies, University of
Oldenburg, Germany. He is the author of Shreds of Matter: Cormac
McCarthy and the Concept of Nature (2018), and of numerous articles
on McCarthy, Mark Z. Danielewski, François Laruelle, and
speculative realism. Greve has co-edited America and the Musical
Unconscious (2015), Superpositions: Laruelle and the Humanities
(2017), “Cormac McCarthy Between Worlds” (2017), and Spaces and
Fictions of the Weird and the Fantastic: Ecologies, Geographies,
Oddities (2019). He is currently working on a manuscript on the
relation between modern poetics and ventriloquism.
Florian Zappe is an Assistant Professor of American Studies
at the Georg-August-University Göttingen, Germany. He is the author
of books on William S. Burroughs ('Control Machines' und
'Dispositive' - Eine foucaultsche Analyse der Machtstrukturen im
Romanwerk von William S. Burroughs zwischen 1959 und 1968, 2008)
and Kathy Acker (Das Zwischen schreiben – Transgression und
avantgardistisches Erbe bei Kathy Acker, 2013), as well as the
co-editor of the essay collection Surveillance|Society|Culture
(2020), and Spaces and Fictions of the Weird and the Fantastic:
Ecologies, Geographies, Oddities (2019). In addition to that, he
has published widely on literary and visual culture. Currently, he
is working on a book project on the cultural history of atheism in
America.
It’s about time that someone took on the task of defining the
‘weird’; that deceptively throwaway term that defines so much of
what is interesting about popular culture in the US. This excellent
collection represents the best of current thinking on the
topic.
*Dr Kevin Corstorphine, Lecturer in American Literature, University
of Hull, UK*
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