Contents:
- THE HISTORY OF HORROR IS GAY
- QUEER FOR FEAR: THE HISTORY OF QUEER HORROR REVIEW: THE GAYT GENRE GAS A VAL DOCERI
THE HISTORY OF HORROR IS GAY
It has s own cemetery full of queer bodi– the genre, stark parture om s ceptn, often relish the opportuny bury s gays.
The Gothic tradn is really jt the Gay tradn. Horat Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto om 1764 is largely accepted as the foundatnal example of gothic wrg, and ’s a story drippg wh homoeroticism.
Other gothic thors like Matthew Lewis, William Thomas Beckford, and Francis Lathom were all homosexual, and their liv greatly impacted the lens through which they wrote their work. Of urse, words like “homosexual” or “gay” are nowhere to be found their works, bee the words hadn’t yet even been vented. It wasn’t d, wasn’t subtextual-- was very, VERY gay.
QUEER FOR FEAR: THE HISTORY OF QUEER HORROR REVIEW: THE GAYT GENRE GAS A VAL DOCERI
Murn ma Nosferatu spired by Stoker’s novel, and was notorly gay. The director of Universal’s Frankenste, Jam Whale, lived as an openly gay man throughout his reer, and livered the wrg of Bri of Frankenste’s Dr.
Septim Pretori, a licly fabulo gay character played by the famoly queer Ernt Thiger. Director Tod Browng has been scribed as an “alleged heterosexual, ” and both of his films Dracula and Freaks are drippg wh homosexual subtext. On the ntrary, those that refe to see a queer story unls featur a giant rotatg voice-over screamg “THIS IS GAY” jt prove that if someone has grown up always seeg themself and their stori reprented on screen, they’ve never had to velop the abily to headnon intifiable visibily.