Right now in the US, it feels like we’re living in a haunted house of historical racial horrors, with “DEI” being demonized and books banned. Southern and Black Gothic literature, however, bravely uncover these past atrocities and their ongoing impact.
On this Horror Joy episode, we welcome author Briana N. Cox to explore Black/Southern Horror. First, we bite into Ryan Coogler’s 2025 hit Sinners, which uses vampiric imagery to explore race, greed, music, and time. Then, we turn to Tananarive Due’s 2023 masterpiece, The Reformatory. Based on the real-life Dozier School for Boys, it follows young Robert Stephens, Jr. through a thinly veiled juvenile prison, using exaggerated sentences, “haints,” and a KKK siege to connect slavery, Jim Crow, and incarceration.
Like English Gothic, Black/Southern Gothic uses crumbling infrastructure and outdated systems, replacing castles with plantations and secret rooms with prison control mechanisms. As Bridget M. Marshall notes, these genres share “creepy buildings, mysterious landscapes, unhealthy obsessions with the past, revelations of dark secrets, acts of violence, and troubled mental states.” Horror is always political, but Black/Southern Gothic highlights how we’re all haunted by our collective past.
Join us to find joy and heartbreak in these troubling histories and horrific tales. Just remember: don’t be seduced by every song, and always, ALWAYS, fight the KKK!
Black Bodies, White Gazes by George Yancy
The Return of the Repressed: The Subprime Haunted House by Jaleesa Rena Harris