Stacey Abbott
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Home among the headstones
Graveyards in Western Gothic television
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Graveyards are a common backdrop to television adaptations of Dracula, in which the Count hides among the dead and seduces the living. It is also within a graveyard that the hero of Nigel Kneale’s The Woman in Black (ITV, 1989) first catches sight of the eponymous spectre who will seal his doom and where gravedigger Mike Ryerson comes face to face with the newly risen and vampirised child vampire, Danny Glick in Stephen King’s Salem’s Lot (CBS, 1979). The graveyard is an ideal setting for uncanny encounters between the living and the dead, lending these meetings a recognisably Gothic and melancholic mise en scène. Yet the aim of this chapter will be to demonstrate how the utilisation of the graveyard in Gothic TV is more than simply a shorthand to evoke a Gothic atmosphere but rather a location that renegotiates the Gothic for television. I will demonstrate how the iconography of the graveyard fosters an audience familiarisation with the conventions of horror while subtly inverting these tropes in family-friendly shows such as The Addams Family (ABC, 1964–6) and The Munsters (CBS, 1964–6). This location, however, also facilitates a confrontation with, and negotiation of, themes of death and grief in series such as Rod Serling’s Night Gallery (NBC, 1969–73), Buffy the Vampire Slayer (WB/UPN, 1997–2003), The Originals (CW, 2013–18), The X-Files (Fox, 1993–2018, and In the Flesh (BBC, 2013–14). Significantly, I will consider how the association of television with themes of the domestic allows for a reimagining of the Gothic graveyard as a site that evokes security and comfort while also disrupting that security through the eruption of the dead through the carefully manicured cemetery lawn, confronting the audience with the horrors of familial trauma and personal loss.

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