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‘There’s a Ghost in My House’: The Female Gothic and the Supernatural in What Lies Beneath (2000)

Gender and Contemporary Horror in Film

ISBN: 978-1-78769-898-7, eISBN: 978-1-78769-897-0

Publication date: 13 March 2019

Abstract

David Punter and Glennis Byron note how the Gothic novel has been divided into two categories: the ‘Male’ and ‘Female’ Gothic. Where the former emphasizes violence and ghosts, the latter focuses on female representation and the disavowal of the supernatural. The Hollywood Gothic films of the 1940s can be said to translate this aspect of the Female Gothic onto the cinema screen: Rebecca (1940), Gaslight (1944) and Secret Beyond the Door (1947) all feature narratives stressing the haunting nature of domestic spaces but there are no actual ghosts present. Robert Zemeckis’s What Lies Beneath (2000) breaks this convention. The film clearly draws on the Female Gothic lineage, situating Claire as a Gothic heroine, and yet there is an important difference: the supernatural is now an integral – and acknowledged – part of the story. This chapter explores this twenty-first century change, arguing that whilst the inclusion of the supernatural can be said to break with previous definitions of the Female Gothic, What Lies Beneath’s depiction of a ghost actually re-imagines and re-emphasizes the concerns at the centre of this tradition: the dramatization of marital and domestic experiences; an interrogation of feminine perception; and the reality of male violence against women.

Keywords

Citation

Kamm, F.A. (2019), "‘There’s a Ghost in My House’: The Female Gothic and the Supernatural in What Lies Beneath (2000)", Holland, S., Shail, R. and Gerrard, S. (Ed.) Gender and Contemporary Horror in Film (Emerald Studies in Popular Culture and Gender), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 133-149. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78769-897-020191010

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Frances A. Kamm