Severance, Liminality, and Analog Horror (Mandela Catalog/The Backrooms)
Summary
This week on Horror Joy, Brian and Jeff traverse the eerie corridors of liminality in horror. They kick off with a deep dive into the Apple TV series Severance, exploring how its portrayal of work-life separation raises existential and psychological questions. Is it a thriller, or horror? Moving forward, they venture into the unsettling realm of analog horror, with a focus on YouTube creators like Kane Pixels and Alex Kister.
Join us as we travel deeper in the backrooms of liminal horror and the analog threat:
·We’ll discuss how liminality works in Gothic literature
·We’ll analyze what Severance tells us about the value of labor and the role that religious language plays in the trust/fear/disgust of corporate overlords
·We’ll question how authenticity is found in the gritty videos of analog horror and the terror of a found footage retelling of Biblical stories
·We’ll find joy in the mystery box of Severance and the labor of love of analog horror
From grainy VHS aesthetics to biblical retellings, they examine how these themes distort reality and evoke a primal fear of the unknown. Join them in exploring the blurred lines of identity, the nature of labor, and the unsettling nostalgia of analog media.
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