This is a superb collection of essays on Twin Peaks. Editors Weinstock and Spooner have assembled an array of top-notch scholars, who address the series from a wide range of critical perspectives - from ecocriticism to psychoanalysis to 'thing theory' to fan studies. The chapters play off one another brilliantly, offering a fitting collective tribute to David Lynch's mesmerizing TV masterpiece on the occasion of its twenty-fifth anniversary. - Rob Latham, editor of The Oxford Handbook of Science Fiction
A quarter-century since its first broadcast, Twin Peaks remains an enigma. But now Weinstock and Spooner have brought together the world's experts on the series, and their discussions of the acting, matter, props, style, psychology, and cultural resonance of Twin Peaks finally lift the veil on the mythical scope of David Lynch and Mark Frost's groundbreaking creation, its legacy and its future. Read this book before you watch the re-boot! - Ernest Mathijs, Centre for Cinema Studies, University of British Columbia, Canada
With Twin Peaks set for a much awaited return to the screens, this collection provides a much needed set of fresh perspectives on the ground-breaking show, featuring textual, industrial, theoretical, and reception-based analyses that shed new light on a cult classic. Highly recommended for both students and researchers, this is an invaluable guide to further understanding the intricacies and enigmas of Lynch and Frost's creation. -
Jamie Sexton, Senior Lecturer, Film and Television Studies, Northumbria University, UKIntroduction. It is Happening Again: New Reflections on Twin Peaks (Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock)
Part I. The Matter of Twin Peaks
1. Wondrous and Strange: The Matter of Twin Peaks (Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock)
2. Substance Abuse: Special Agent Dale Cooper, What's the Matter? (Martha P. Nochimson)
3. The Owls Are Not What They Seem: Animals and Nature in Twin Peaks (Sherryl Vint)
4. That Cherry Pie is Worth a Stop: Food and Spaces of Consumption in Twin Peaks (Lorna Piatti-Farnell)
5. Wrapped in Plastic: David Lynch's Material Girls (Catherine Spooner)
Part II. Twin Peaks, in Theory
6. Jacques Lacan, Walk with Me: On the Letter (Eric Savoy)
7. Lodged in a Fantasy Space: Twin Peaks and Hidden Obscenities (Todd McGowan)
Part III. Genre, Fandom, and New Reflections8. Complementary Verses: The Science Fiction of Twin Peaks (J. P. Telotte)
9. Doing Weird Things for the Sake of Being Weird: Directing Twin Peaks (Stacey Abbott)
10. I'll See You Again in 25 Years: Paratextually Re-commodifying and Revisiting Anniversary Twin Peaks (Matt Hills)
11. Nightmare in Red? Twin Peaks Parody, Homage, Intertextuality, and Mashup (Lorna Jowett)
12. Trapped in the Hysterical Sublime: Twin Peaks, Postmodernism, and the Neoliberal Now (Linnie Blake)