Historicizing Slashers PCA/ACA National Conference April 15-18, 2020 Philadelphia, PA, USA https://pcaaca.org/ On the eve of Friday the 13th celebrating its 40th anniversary, the concept of the “slasher” and the “slasher film” remains a topic of debate and discourse among horror scholars and fear film aficionados. Though theorized and analyzed consistently for the past 30 years, slasher films possess a complex history, one that contains controversy (such as graphic violence, misogyny and the promotion of seemingly socially conservative “morals”), a labyrinthine origin and genealogy as well as alternating and shifting periods of popularity. This panel looks toward the concepts of “Historicizing” and “History” – in all their iterations and understandings - to investigate the cultural and cinematic significance of this (sub/non) genre. This panel will explore the meanings, connotations, dynamics, systems and processes of “Historicizing” and “History” within - and surrounding – “slashers.” This can include personal histories, analytical approaches, archival projects, case studies, theoretical explorations as well as other configurations. Possible Topics/Approaches Include: Marketing and Visual Culture Gender Audience Reception Class Archival Projects Personal History Case Studies Nostalgia Archive Queer Theory Affect Hauntology Graphic Violence Genre Theory Class Allusion/Quotation Race/Ethnicity Fan Communities/Fan Production Transmedial Iterations Critical Theory Pedagogy Please send an abstract, proposal or short description (100 words or less) of your project to Shannon Blake Skelton ([log in to unmask]) by October 27th, 2019 at 11pm (Central Standard). Shannon Blake Skelton, PhD He/His/Him Read More Here<https://uwm.edu/lgbtrc/support/gender-pronouns/> Assistant Professor Kansas State University 141 Nichols Editor/Essayist Wes Craven: Interviews https://www.upress.state.ms.us/Books/W/Wes-Craven Author of THE LATE WORK OF SAM SHEPARD http://www.bloomsbury.com/us/the-late-work-of-sam-shepard-9781474234733/ ---- For past messages, visit the Screen-L Archives: https://listserv.ua.edu/archives/screen-l.html