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

A Rift between Worlds: The Retro-1980s and the Neoliberal Upside Down in Stranger Things

View through CrossRef
The Netflix series Stranger Things (2016–) is one of a host of recent 1980s-set texts that returns to the decade through the lens of cultural nostalgia. Recalling and resituating its viewers in the Reagan era, the series presents a contemporary Gothic narrative by returning to the 1980s as a period of profound cultural importance, setting its secondary Gothic space, The Upside Down, as a Gothic neoliberal shadow world that conveys profound implications for a terrifying future. Examining the 1980s as a nexus point for socio-political anxieties and nostalgic recall, which has dominated the economic landscape and many Hollywood films and shows in the twenty-first century, this article argues that Stranger Things situates its characters at the precipice of a wrong turn in history, a period in which its youthful band of heroes, like their 1980s counterparts in its science fiction and fantasy cinema before them, must chase down their own futures to prevent a terrible fate. Through ‘reflective nostalgia’, this rift between the 1980s onscreen and the shadow future of the Upside Down is presented as a diachronic narrative, a return to the past to identify and critique the 1980s as a point of origin for numerous socio-economic anxieties and ills in our contemporary neoliberal Gothic world. Stranger Things, alongside other 1980s retro-texts, articulates our own Gothic terrors in the contemporary moment. Moreover, this article argues how and why the Gothic 1980s is a revisited site of return from which we need to learn, particularly following the post-2008 financial crisis, to overcome the necro-economic consequences of the ‘Upside Down’ neoliberal wasteland of the twenty-first century.
Edinburgh University Press
Title: A Rift between Worlds: The Retro-1980s and the Neoliberal Upside Down in Stranger Things
Description:
The Netflix series Stranger Things (2016–) is one of a host of recent 1980s-set texts that returns to the decade through the lens of cultural nostalgia.
Recalling and resituating its viewers in the Reagan era, the series presents a contemporary Gothic narrative by returning to the 1980s as a period of profound cultural importance, setting its secondary Gothic space, The Upside Down, as a Gothic neoliberal shadow world that conveys profound implications for a terrifying future.
Examining the 1980s as a nexus point for socio-political anxieties and nostalgic recall, which has dominated the economic landscape and many Hollywood films and shows in the twenty-first century, this article argues that Stranger Things situates its characters at the precipice of a wrong turn in history, a period in which its youthful band of heroes, like their 1980s counterparts in its science fiction and fantasy cinema before them, must chase down their own futures to prevent a terrible fate.
Through ‘reflective nostalgia’, this rift between the 1980s onscreen and the shadow future of the Upside Down is presented as a diachronic narrative, a return to the past to identify and critique the 1980s as a point of origin for numerous socio-economic anxieties and ills in our contemporary neoliberal Gothic world.
Stranger Things, alongside other 1980s retro-texts, articulates our own Gothic terrors in the contemporary moment.
Moreover, this article argues how and why the Gothic 1980s is a revisited site of return from which we need to learn, particularly following the post-2008 financial crisis, to overcome the necro-economic consequences of the ‘Upside Down’ neoliberal wasteland of the twenty-first century.

Related Results

Back‐arc rifting in the Izu‐Bonin Island Arc: Structural evolution of Hachijo and Aoga Shima Rifts
Back‐arc rifting in the Izu‐Bonin Island Arc: Structural evolution of Hachijo and Aoga Shima Rifts
Abstract Multi‐ and single‐channel seismic profiles are used to investigate the structural evolution of back‐arc rifting in the intra‐oceanic Izu‐Bonin Arc. Hachijo and Aoga ...
Velocity Modelling and Depth Conversion Uncertainty Mitigation in GS327 Oil Field, in Gulf of Suez Basin
Velocity Modelling and Depth Conversion Uncertainty Mitigation in GS327 Oil Field, in Gulf of Suez Basin
Abstract The Gulf of Suez rift initiated in the Late Oligocene, probably propagating northwards, and intersecting a major east-west structural boundary of Late Eocen...
Responsibilised Resilience? Reworking Neoliberal Social Policy Texts
Responsibilised Resilience? Reworking Neoliberal Social Policy Texts
Introduction This essay begins with the premise that resilience, broadly defined as positive adaptation despite adversity (Garmezy and Rutter), and resilience building are importa...
RETRO AS AN OBJECT OF LINGUISTIC STUDY
RETRO AS AN OBJECT OF LINGUISTIC STUDY
The article deals with retro as a separate object of linguistic study. Rapid informatization and digitalization raise demand for the «aesthetics of the past», which results in prom...
Impossible Worlds
Impossible Worlds
Impossible worlds constitute an increasingly popular yet controversial topic in logic and metaphysics. The term “impossible worlds” parallels the term “possible worlds” and commonl...
Early onshore basaltic alteration and its natural hydrogen potential in the Asal–Ghoubbet rift, Republic of Djibouti.
Early onshore basaltic alteration and its natural hydrogen potential in the Asal–Ghoubbet rift, Republic of Djibouti.
The East African Rift (EAR) is a large opening system that allows the observation of all stages of rift evolution from continental opening in the south to oceanization in the north...
Magmatic centers and rift segmentation: insights from the Late Quaternary Menengai Caldera, Central Kenya Rift
Magmatic centers and rift segmentation: insights from the Late Quaternary Menengai Caldera, Central Kenya Rift
<p>In magmatically active continental rifts, crustal deformation is often accompanied by caldera volcanism along the rift axis. These caldera volcanoes help to charac...
Discovery of Intracratonic Rift in the Upper Yangtze and Its Control Effect on the Formation of the Anyue Giant Gas Field
Discovery of Intracratonic Rift in the Upper Yangtze and Its Control Effect on the Formation of the Anyue Giant Gas Field
Abstract —According to drilling and seismic data, the Late Sinian–Early Cambrian intracratonic rift was found in the Deyang–Anyue area of the Upper Yangtze craton. T...

Back to Top