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Mid-Atlantic Popular &
American Culture Association

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Hawthorne, Jackson, and LeGuin Walk Into A Peculiar Little Town: The Particular American Horror of the Small Town

Area: 
Presenter: 
Peter Cullen Bryan (Clemson University)
Presentation type: 
Paper
Abstract: 

In American culture, there are few symbols more powerful that of the small town. Utilized as a political talking point (“Main Street USA”), a symbol of authenticity (“Real America”), and a force of marketing (home-cooked meals), the friendly small town exists across all media and eras of American history. An equally long tradition within American horror posits the small town as a site of danger and terror, where dread rituals are enacted out of tradition and familial loyalty. This trope (Stephen King called it “The Peculiar Little Town”) springs forth from the melting pot of American culture: the long-held policy of expansion and exploration, contrasting Europe’s, where towns and villages might have existed for centuries. American settlements could appear overnight; an early American traveler might encounter a village that wasn’t there a year prior, filled with individuals utterly alien to him. A sense of danger intermixed with vague familiarity: the uncanny given shape. This symbol is one of the most persistent within the American horror tradition, one which adapts to the fears of a given author and era. The small town is at once recognizable to us, while also being an alien space, a reflection of our collective youth warped by the dark secrets of American life.

By examining the symbols within these works (the small town) and how the respective authors subvert the ideal into something uncanny, a comprehension of each work’s significance, both historical and literary, can be gained. Context is key: Hawthorne rails against the glorification of Puritan communities, Jackson against the dangers engendered within tradition, while LeGuin tackles the problem on a global scale. These stories have changed our views about the Arcadian communities that allegedly form the basis of the American character, and a psychoanalytic reading allows understanding of the messages ingrained within these works.

Scheduled on: 
Friday, November 4, 1:45 pm to 3:00 pm

About the presenter

Peter Cullen Bryan

Dr. PETER CULLEN BRYAN teaches English at Clemson University. He received his PhD in American Studies and Communication at the Pennsylvania State University in 2018. His areas of study include American Studies, Intercultural Communication, and 21st Century American culture, emphasizing comic art and fan communities. His first book, exploring the transcultural adaptations of Carl Barks’s Duck Comics, is out now. His research has appeared in the Journal of Fandom Studies, The Journal of American Culture, and Popular Culture Studies Journal, exploring the intersections of creative activism and fan identities in adaptational and transnational spaces.

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