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Dining with Madmen Thomas Fahy

Dining with Madmen By Thomas Fahy

Dining with Madmen by Thomas Fahy


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Summary

In Dining with Madmen: Fat, Food, and the Environment in 1980s Horror, author Thomas Fahy explores America's preoccupation with body weight, processed foods, and pollution through the lens of horror.

Dining with Madmen Summary

Dining with Madmen: Fat, Food, and the Environment in 1980s Horror by Thomas Fahy

In Dining with Madmen: Fat, Food, and the Environment in 1980s Horror, author Thomas Fahy explores America's preoccupation with body weight, processed foods, and pollution through the lens of horror. Conspicuous consumption may have communicated success in the eighties, but only if it did not become visible on the body. American society had come to view fatness as a horrifying transformation-it exposed the potential harm of junk food, gave life to the promises of workout and diet culture, and represented the country's worst consumer impulses, inviting questions about the personal and environmental consequences of excess.

While changing into a vampire or a zombie often represented widespread fears about addiction and overeating, it also played into concerns about pollution. Ozone depletion, acid rain, and toxic waste already demonstrated the irrevocable harm being done to the planet. The horror genre-from A Nightmare on Elm Street to American Psycho-responded by presenting this damage as an urgent problem, and, through the sudden violence of killers, vampires, and zombies, it depicted the consequences of inaction as terrifying.

Whether through Hannibal Lecter's cannibalism, a vampire's thirst for blood in The Queen of the Damned and The Lost Boys, or an overwhelming number of zombies in George Romero's Day of the Dead, 1980s horror uses out-of-control hunger to capture deep-seated concerns about the physical and material consequences of unchecked consumption. Its presentation of American appetites resonated powerfully for audiences preoccupied with body size, food choices, and pollution. And its use of bodily change, alongside the bloodlust of killers and the desolate landscapes of apocalyptic fiction, demanded a recognition of the potentially horrifying impact of consumerism on nature, society, and the self.

About Thomas Fahy

Thomas Fahy is professor of English at Long Island University Post. He has published numerous books, including The Philosophy of Horror and The Writing Dead: Talking Terror with TV's Top Horror Writers, published by University Press of Mississippi, and two young adult horror novels, Sleepless and The Unspoken.

Additional information

NLS9781496821546
9781496821546
1496821548
Dining with Madmen: Fat, Food, and the Environment in 1980s Horror by Thomas Fahy
New
Paperback
University Press of Mississippi
2019-02-13
242
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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