Amy Harris
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Women’s folk horror in Britain
History, industry, style
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Using Hélène Cixous’ notion of the écriture féminine as its framework, this chapter explores how women filmmakers have a special ability to subvert established tropes and return agency onto women subjects in their films. Through close textual analysis of Jacqueline Kirkham’s Following the Wicca Man (2013) and K. Pervaiz’s Maya (2021), two independently financed British films, this chapter explores the new forms of subjectivity that come by having women in frontline creative roles. A combination of close textual analysis paired with filmmaker interviews demonstrates how contemporary folk horror made by women filmmakers can push back against the established androcentric forms of the subgenre, offering new frameworks of representation that challenge, subvert and deviate from traditional folk horror. This chapter argues that, in one way or another, women’s creative autonomy invites new and exciting possibilities within the context of a historically bound mode like British folk horror and can provide spaces for women to explore their own identity and agency through the prism of established generic systems of representation.

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Folk horror on film

Return of the British repressed

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