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- fig. 7
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Re-presentations, Adaptations, and VARIATIONS
Furthermore, the individual works also contain references to the lives and practices of their makers. The remainder of Belzile and Craig’s Untitled, for example, feels like a narrative depiction of...
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Who Can Save the Brides of Billy?: Horror and Gender in "Black Christmas" and "The Bloody Chamber"
The killer is in the house. It's a classic trope that's been around since baby sitters started babysitting, since the earliest days of horror films. The underrated classic, Black...
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Who Can Save the Brides of Billy?: Horror and Gender in "Black Christmas" and "The Bloody Chamber"
The similarities begin in the depiction of our killers, the psychotic Billy in Black Christmas, and the blood-thirsty Duke in The Bloody Chamber. Before we get any visual details,...
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Who Can Save the Brides of Billy?: Horror and Gender in "Black Christmas" and "The Bloody Chamber"
The telephone—a device that reinforces the theme of seeing/not-seeing—is the focus of some of the most terrifying scenes in Black Christmas, turning the killer into a bodiless, transcendent voice,...
- Editor's Note
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Christopher McKinnon
*Christopher McKinnon* is a writer and community organizer who lives in Toronto.
- 006 Fall
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