This is essentially a sequel to the secret life of puppets, arguing that since around the turn of the 21st century the supernatural has been escaping popular culture and beoming a more active force in america, as well as shedding its association with the demonic and reclaiming a lost (like, for 2000 years) positive association. Like secret life of puppets, the book meanders sometimes, shows off its erudition, and includes chapters that don't really need to be there. But good stuff.
Introduction nicely summarizes the secret life of puppets, and says this book will deal more explicitly with the gothic.
[one note: she does not mention nightmare on main street, but she seems to be addressing its final question: what's happening to the gothic.]
second chapter, roots history of american gothic in anticlerical novels dating back to the country's founding. more recent ones, too (dan brown). notes this is backhanded compliment, too: only the catholic church has real power. also, these books start to move toward acknowledging that there is a god or positive force in the universe. connected to New Thought: man created through divinization, so has some godly powers.
chapter three on gothic gods is the clearest writing in either of her two books. narrative history of how fans have found supernatural by creating religion out of lovecraft's gods. but note: gods are demonic.
chapter four: big gothic three: vampire, zombie, satan. quick--not potted--histories of each in american tradition. can see how vampires become positive forces, zombies harder, but some positive. satan is less important, gone from the stories, or secondary to his subdemons which are more ambiguous (think Spawn). All this is thanatos--need eros, too.
chapter five: long and winding a la marina warner. look at gothic romance. there's a male gothic: individuation thru violence, stabilise hierarchy. and a female--quest for love and marriage.
///nb: 99: mystery used to be related to sacred rites--now about imagination.//////
gothic romance was fairly stable until the 1990s--almost 200 years. Then changed--more sex, supernatural explanation real, not dismissed. Romance also intermingles with other genres--science fiction, mystery, etc.
chapter 7 is the heart of the argument--twilight. vampires arrive late in western european tradition. 18th century. same until 20th century--anne rice: now subjects, no objects; removed from christianity; immortal rather than undead. like romance, vampire story mixed with other genres. also, get cultists acting this out. and now that vampires have become gods, the question is, where does the story go?
chapter 8: does for zombies what above chapter does for vampire. in both cases, creature goes from colonized, to postcolonial object, to subject. tells history of zombie in 20th century. zombies also doubles--consumerist and war. also get performances, cultists, secondary worlds, blurring of fiction and non.
chapter 9: gothic thater of halloween. kind of a substitute for statn here, since he's out of story. halloween is odd holiday--dark and pagan. turned into performances, which she looks at--acting out of religious themes. everything had been subjectivized--now coming out again: ideas become objects.
chapter 10: looks at horror movies, for rules. not sure how it fits flow of book. america is Rome--but southeast asia, especially, is producing interestign works, too: some reverse influence. (esp the supernatural female). gothic horror is folk tale--repetition is important. boys like torture porn, which is not true horror, and asserts conventional morality. girls like the more romantic horror--in which the hero visits a dark place and change fate. the underworld can be anywhere.
chapter 11: a look at the work of guillermo del torro. interesting, but connection?
12: christian gothic: the shack, etc. influenced by gothic traidtions, so much so not really christian but gnostic, a la bloom. individual is god, is divine. but there's the divinity.
epilogue: a conflicted conclusion. religion has been ignored--or supernatural, and so it has gone into popular culture. now, there has developed an idea of a gnostic, divine self. why? why not a new go? [no answer]. we now acknowledge a reality beyond the material--but no new religion. Is the gothic, then, done, havign discharged its duty? Maybe. Right now, though, it is flourishing