Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Sweet-and-Sour Soup for the Psyche

View through CrossRef
Abstract Excess signals uncontrolled natural agency and thus provides a key ingredient in horror and ecohorror. Because excess ultimately threatens our agency over matter and meaning, nature comes to threaten the fall and dissolution of humanity, offer an erasure of what it means to be human, and exert a muffling of the very agency that defines our sense of our exceptionalism. Yet horror and ecohorror also enthrall. They do so precisely because they provide a perversely traumatophilic/traumatophobic sensation, a paradoxical presence of opposites that somehow, like sweet-and-sour soup for the psyche, tastes good. We watch or read ecohorror for the attraction and repulsion its various traumas offer. Horror and the disgusting captivate us, reminding us at the same time of our corporeality and its fragility. Slime is central here. Slime is the horror of boundary transgressions, of indefinability, of unstoppability, of corporeal and natural agency. Reactions to slime reveal not only a fear of nature but a fear of women, and understanding theoretical connections between sexism and ecophobia is a critical step toward ending both. Central here is understanding how the balancing between attraction and repulsion, traumatophilia and traumatophobia, produces compelling spectacle that is entertaining but stimulates no activist engagement.
Title: Sweet-and-Sour Soup for the Psyche
Description:
Abstract Excess signals uncontrolled natural agency and thus provides a key ingredient in horror and ecohorror.
Because excess ultimately threatens our agency over matter and meaning, nature comes to threaten the fall and dissolution of humanity, offer an erasure of what it means to be human, and exert a muffling of the very agency that defines our sense of our exceptionalism.
Yet horror and ecohorror also enthrall.
They do so precisely because they provide a perversely traumatophilic/traumatophobic sensation, a paradoxical presence of opposites that somehow, like sweet-and-sour soup for the psyche, tastes good.
We watch or read ecohorror for the attraction and repulsion its various traumas offer.
Horror and the disgusting captivate us, reminding us at the same time of our corporeality and its fragility.
Slime is central here.
Slime is the horror of boundary transgressions, of indefinability, of unstoppability, of corporeal and natural agency.
Reactions to slime reveal not only a fear of nature but a fear of women, and understanding theoretical connections between sexism and ecophobia is a critical step toward ending both.
Central here is understanding how the balancing between attraction and repulsion, traumatophilia and traumatophobia, produces compelling spectacle that is entertaining but stimulates no activist engagement.

Related Results

A conversation with Timothy Mo
A conversation with Timothy Mo
ABSTRACT:  Timothy Mo is author of six internationally acclaimed novels, The Monkey King (1978), Sour Sweet (1982), An Insular Possession (1986), The Redundancy of Courage (1991), ...
Spectacle Matters: Titanic, The Sweet Hereafter, and the Academy and Genie Awards
Spectacle Matters: Titanic, The Sweet Hereafter, and the Academy and Genie Awards
In spite of the fact that, as Atom Egoyan has noted, “both The Sweet Hereafter and Titanic have big crashes with ice and water that take place halfway through the film” (qtd. in La...
Socio-Psychological Alienation in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s “Young Goodman Brown”
Socio-Psychological Alienation in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s “Young Goodman Brown”
This paper investigates socio-psychological alienation in Hawthorne’s story “Young Goodman Brown”. It focuses on Brown’s psychological motiv...
Deconstructing Fosse
Deconstructing Fosse
This article discusses ‘Paramodernities #5: All That Spectacle: Dance on Stage and Screens’, the instalment of Netta Yerushalmy’s Paramodernities series focusing on Bob Fosse’s fil...
The Subtler Dynamic
The Subtler Dynamic
It began with a cry, interrupted by forceful vomiting. Then came a gasp. The first from an elderly Chinese woman forgotten in a dry storage room. The second from her daughter in th...
The Romance of the Novel
The Romance of the Novel
Students of the ancient world are falling for the ancient Greek and Latin novels in increasing numbers, a state of affairs of which there were few intimations a generation ago. To ...
Music at the Bauhaus, 1919–1933
Music at the Bauhaus, 1919–1933
It is a curious fact that there is very little crossover between studies on the visual arts and those on the auditory. There are general cultural histories, to be sure, but even in...

Back to Top