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Horror and the Holy:
Wisdom-Teachings of the Monster Tale
Kirk J.
Schneider
Throughout history,
human beings have been strangely fascinated by the monstrous and
the macabre. In Horror and the Holy, a study of the classic
horror story, Kirk Schneider explains the compelling power of
such tales as a result of our thirst for the sacred, and
identifies elements of the holy in familiar blood-curdling
yarns.
True horror arises when the mundane becomes unexpected and when
the contained breaks free of its confining chains to become
unlimited. Anything boundless tends to become terrifying, argues
Schneider. It is infinitude, which draws us to the unsavory,
infinitude that lurks behind dread. Sheer bliss, paradise, or
Nirvana therefore always has the potential to turn into horror,
as limits fall away and the boundless expanses of infinity open
up. While ecstasy is a glimpse of the infinite, terror is full
disclosure.
Drawing upon a detailed and telling analysis of eleven
well-known horror stories, Dr. Schneider finds that a spiritual
understanding of life can be attained through horror. Classic
horror steers a middle path between fanaticism and despair: the
path of wonderment. Horror teaches us that human personality is
paradoxical; that revulsion and disgust are the obverse of
excitement and freedom, and that both poles are vital to
individual, social, and ecological well-being.
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