by Lisa Morton
Reaktion Books, 2012
Stacks Call Number: GT4965 .M67 2012
Available for four-week check out with your SWC photo ID
Trick or Treat provides a thorough history of this most misunderstood
phenomenon. Offering a fascinating overview of how Halloween has spread
around the globe, it asks how festivals as diverse as the Celtic
Samhain, the British Guy Fawkes Day and the Catholic Holy Days of All
Saints and All Souls could have blended to produce the modern Halloween.
The holiday was reborn in the United States – where costuming and
‘trick or treat’ rituals became new customs – with parallels in the
related, yet independent holidays of Central America, in particular
Mexico’s Day of the Dead. The recent explosion in popularity of haunted
attractions is discussed and we see also how Halloween’s popularity is
rising in non-Western countries like Russia, Japan and China. Finally,
Morton considers the impact of such events as 9/11 and the economic
recession on the celebration as urban legends and costuming wax and
wane.
Halloween’s influence on popular culture is examined via the
literary works of Washington Irving and Ray Bradbury, films such as John
Carpenter’s Halloween and Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas,
and television series including Buffy the Vampire Slayer, The Simpsons
and True Blood.
Examining Halloween in the context of its increasing
worldwide popularity, and illustrated with over 40 images, Trick or
Treat leads us on a journey from the spectacular to the macabre, making
it a must for anyone looking beyond the mask to the deepest roots of
this modern holiday.
-- Review from Amazon.com
No comments:
Post a Comment