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Film, Folklore and Urban Legends


Film, Folklore and Urban Legends

Paperback by Koven, Mikel J.

Film, Folklore and Urban Legends

£57.00

ISBN:
9780810860254
Publication Date:
25 Oct 2007
Language:
English
Publisher:
Scarecrow Press
Pages:
216 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 21 - 23 May 2024
Film, Folklore and Urban Legends

Description

From Alien to When a Stranger Calls, many films are based on folklore or employ an urban legend element to propel the narrative. But once those traditional aspects have been identified, do they warrant further scrutiny? Indeed, why is the study of folklore in popular film important? In Films, Folklore and Urban Legends, Mikel J. Koven addresses this issue by exploring the convergence of folklore with popular cinema studies. Well beyond the identification of traditional motifs in popular cinema, Koven reveals new paradigms of filmic analysis, which open up when one looks at movies through the lens of folklore. In particular, this book focuses on the study of urban legends and how these narratives are used as inspiration for a number of films. Divided into five sections, the book begins with a general survey of the existing literature on folklore/film, predominantly from the perspective of folklore studies. Subsequent chapters address discourses of belief, how urban legends provide the organizing principle of some films, and how certain films "act out" or perform a legend. Movies discussed in this book include Alligator, Candyman, The Curve, Dead Man on Campus, I Know What You Did Last Summer, Urban Legend, Weekend at Bernie's, and The Wicker Man, as well as zombie films, killer bee movies, and slasher films (including Halloween, Black Christmas, The Burning and Terror Train). Koven also devotes attention to key television shows such as The X-Files and Most Haunted. In his analysis, Koven explains not only how film and television narratives are built upon already-existing popular culture beliefs, but also how films and television shows recycle those beliefs back into popular culture. Taken as a whole, Film, Folklore and Urban Legends both stands on its own as the first book-length study of folklore and popular cinema, and as an introductory textbook for the study of folklore and film.

Contents

Part 1 Acknowledgments Part 2 Introduction Part 3 Part I: The Study of Folklore and Film Chapter 4 1. Folklore and Film Part 5 Part II: The Search for a Methodology Chapter 6 2. Based on Some Forgotten Lore: The Wicker Man, Frazer, and the Ancient Celts Chapter 7 3. Searching for Tale-Types and Motifs in the Zombie Film Chapter 8 4. Orality as Methodology for Understanding Vernacular Comedies and the Comic Corpse Part 9 Part III: Issues of Belief Chapter 10 5. Discourses of Belief in The X-Files Chapter 11 6. "Buzz Off!": The Killer Bee Movie as Modern Belief Narrative Part 12 Part IV: Urban Legends and Film Chapter 13 7. Studying the Urban Legend Film Chapter 14 8. The Slasher Film as Folkloristic Social Script Part 15 Part V: Ostension Chapter 16 9. Film and Ostension: The Case of Candyman Chapter 17 10. The Convergence of Folklore, Belief, and Popular Media: The Case of Most Haunted Part 18 Afterword Part 19 Filmography Part 20 Bibliography Part 21 Index Part 22 About the Author

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