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No Go the Bogeyman: Scaring, Lulling, and Making Mock

No Go the Bogeyman: Scaring, Lulling, and Making Mock

Marina Warner
4/5 ( ratings)
No Go the Bogeyman considers the enduring presence and popularity of figures of male terror, establishing their origins in mythology and their current relation to ideas about sexuality and power, youth and age. Songs, stories, images, and films about frightening monsters have always been invented to allay the very terrors that our sleep of reason conjures up. Warner shows how these images and stories, while they may unfold along different lines - scaring, lulling, or making mock - have the strategic simultaneous purpose of both arousing and controlling the underlying fear. In analysis of material long overlooked by cultural critics, historians, and even psychologists, Warner revises our understanding of storytelling in our contemporary culture. She asks us to reconsider the unintended consequences of our age-old, outmoded notions about masculine identity and about racial stereotyping, and warns us of the dangerous, unthinking ways we perpetuate the bogeyman.
Language
English
Pages
435
Format
Hardcover
Publisher
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Release
February 16, 1999
ISBN
0374223017
ISBN 13
9780374223014

No Go the Bogeyman: Scaring, Lulling, and Making Mock

Marina Warner
4/5 ( ratings)
No Go the Bogeyman considers the enduring presence and popularity of figures of male terror, establishing their origins in mythology and their current relation to ideas about sexuality and power, youth and age. Songs, stories, images, and films about frightening monsters have always been invented to allay the very terrors that our sleep of reason conjures up. Warner shows how these images and stories, while they may unfold along different lines - scaring, lulling, or making mock - have the strategic simultaneous purpose of both arousing and controlling the underlying fear. In analysis of material long overlooked by cultural critics, historians, and even psychologists, Warner revises our understanding of storytelling in our contemporary culture. She asks us to reconsider the unintended consequences of our age-old, outmoded notions about masculine identity and about racial stereotyping, and warns us of the dangerous, unthinking ways we perpetuate the bogeyman.
Language
English
Pages
435
Format
Hardcover
Publisher
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Release
February 16, 1999
ISBN
0374223017
ISBN 13
9780374223014

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