The STUDIA UNIVERSITATIS BABEŞ-BOLYAI issue article summary

The summary of the selected article appears at the bottom of the page. In order to get back to the contents of the issue this article belongs to you have to access the link from the title. In order to see all the articles of the archive which have as author/co-author one of the authors mentioned below, you have to access the link from the author's name.

 
       
         
    STUDIA DRAMATICA - Issue no. 1 / 2020  
         
  Article:   MAINSTREAM SATANIC CINEMA IN THE SEVENTIES: A GENERATIONAL CRISIS OF ASSIMILATION.

Authors:  DAVID MELBYE.
 
       
         
  Abstract:  
DOI: 10.24193/subbdrama.2020.1.10

Published Online: 2020-03-30
Published Print: 2020-03-30
pp. 203-226

VIEW PDF

FULL PDF

A particularly fertile period for satanic presence can be found in mainstream Hollywood during the early to mid 1970s. Encouraged by the success of Rosemary’s Baby, major studios produced The Exorcist and The Omen series, not to mention a flurry of independent productions across the decade. Neither before nor since this decade has satanic content in cinema achieved such widespread popularity, and so this particular moment ought to warrant deeper consideration. In general, these narratives appealed to countercultural notions of conspiracy, especially with respect to authority figures and/or the government. But at an even more subconscious level, these satanic films spoke to a pervading fear, at this particular time, of relinquishing a former sense of control over one’s destiny. This article explores and elucidates the cultural conditions attributable for the emergence and popular embrace of these films in this particularly modernist cultural moment.

Keywords: Satan, satanic, witchcraft, witches, Hollywood, conspiracy, counterculture, countercultural, modernist, modernism.
 
         
     
         
         
      Back to previous page