麻豆视频

Exploring fear and fascination with a Popular Horror class

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When 麻豆视频 professor steps into the classroom to teach ENGL 419 Popular Horror, he鈥檚 not just talking about things that go bump in the night鈥攈e and his students are exploring what makes people seek out horror in the first place.

exorcist cover
HarperCollins issued a new edition of The Exorcist in 2025 with a glow-in-the-dark cover. Photo provided

For more than a decade, Anderson has taught classes that blend literature and the supernatural. He鈥檚 led semester-long dives into vampires, ghosts, and zombies. His Indigenous literature class regularly focuses on ghosts and hauntings. 鈥淭he ghosts are everywhere in Indigenous literature so it turns out to be a really nice way to introduce people to the subject,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd it opens up doors for thinking about other cultural things.鈥

He admits it is always a challenge deciding what goes on the syllabus. 鈥淗orror does so many different things鈥攊t goes in so many directions,鈥 Anderson said. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 want the class to just be about bestsellers, but about what draws people to horror and the kinds of horror that are thriving right now.鈥

The course breaks horror down into categories such as vampires, demonic possession, Indigenous horror, and found footage, pairing classic works such as Bram Stoker鈥檚 Dracula and William Peter Blatty鈥檚 The Exorcist with films and more contemporary readings and criticism.

Though horror stories often center on isolation, Anderson鈥檚 classroom is anything but lonely.

鈥淭his class is a blast,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen you put horror fans together, there鈥檚 this incredible bond. We鈥檙e all kind of weird in the same way, and it makes it really fun.鈥

In fact, that鈥檚 why English major Madison Perino signed up for the class鈥攖he community. 鈥淚 love horror and wanted to be around people who like horror and want to talk about it.鈥

Eric Gary Anderson. Photo provided

Perino said she also appreciates hearing the different perspectives on the works being studied, and there are a lot of them. In the classes leading up to Halloween, Anderson was facilitating lively discussions about The Exorcist. The students complained about Father Karras dragging his feet in requesting an exorcism as they discussed the book in depth. 

The walls of Anderson鈥檚 Music and Theater Building class are covered in white boards and he gets the class up and moving around as they put their thoughts on the walls. One panel this week is simply labeled 鈥淒emons.鈥 

The students said that sometimes at the end of class they will take a kind of 鈥済allery walk鈥 around the room and read the walls. Anderson also documents the written comments with photos. 

In addition to the discussions, English major Alex Miles said he finds horror and what it says about the culture fascinating. 鈥淎nd the fact that I get to 鈥榟ate watch鈥 The Nun and write an essay about it makes me very happy,鈥 said Miles.

Anderson said, 鈥淚t鈥檚 fascinating to think about what was scaring people in the 1970s. [The Exorcist novel] is a slow burn鈥攊t鈥檚 unsettling in a different way than the movie. And when you pair it with the surge of interest in things like The Nun, which is one of the highest-grossing horror films of all time, it opens up questions about religious horror and why it continues to resonate.鈥

He also sees horror evolving with new forms of media. 鈥淪ome of my students encounter horror through gaming鈥攝ombie games, survival horror, found footage-style stories. That鈥檚 all part of popular horror now.鈥

Anderson also encourages creativity in his classes. For their final projects, students can choose to produce original works鈥攕hort fiction, paintings, or multimedia pieces鈥攁longside a critical reflection.

鈥淭he creative projects blow me away every semester,鈥 Anderson said. 鈥淛ust opening that door and saying, 鈥榊ou鈥檙e allowed to do this,鈥 is really meaningful for [the students].鈥

For those looking for a chilling Halloween read, Anderson recommends The Buffalo Hunter Hunter by Stephen Graham Jones, an Indigenous vampire novel that reinvents familiar tropes. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e a vampire, you start taking on the traits of whoever鈥攐r whatever鈥攜ou鈥檝e been drinking from,鈥 Anderson said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 such a clever twist.鈥

He also praises Paul Tremblay鈥檚 A Head Full of Ghosts, a modern possession story that blurs the line between faith, fear, and media spectacle. 鈥淚t has one of the best unreliable narrators I鈥檝e ever read,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e never quite sure what鈥檚 real.鈥

Ultimately, for Anderson, horror isn鈥檛 just about fear鈥攊t鈥檚 about fascination.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a really great time to be alive if you like horror,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hese stories let us explore what scares us most, and in doing so, they help us understand the world鈥攁nd ourselves鈥攁 little better.鈥