Editors Aviva Briefel and Jason Middleton assemble the first study of horror’s critique of labor. In the 1970s and 1980s, films such as The Shining and Dawn of the Dead responded to deindustrialization, automation, globalization, and rising numbers of women in the workforce. Labors of Fear explores these critical issues and extends them in discussions of recent works such as The Autopsy of Jane Doe, Midsommar, Survival of the Dead, It Follows, Get Out, and Us. Covering films ranging from the 1970s onward, these essays address novel and newly recognized modes and conditions of labor: reproductive labor, emotion work and emotional labor, social media and self-branding, intellectual labor, service work, precarity, and underemployment. In its singular way, horror continues to make spine-tingling sense of what is most destructive in the wider sociopolitical context of US capitalism.
Aviva Briefel is the Edward Little Professor of the English Language and Literature and Cinema Studies at Bowdoin College and the coeditor of Horror after 9/11: World of Fear, Cinema of Terror.
Jason Middleton is an associate professor of English and film and media studies at the University of Rochester and the author of Documentary’s Awkward Turn: Cringe Comedy and Media Spectatorship.