Explores how contemporary Taiwanese horror cinema uses ghostly narratives to address identity, trauma, and cultural change, blending folklore and futurity within global, queer, and art-house film contexts
Contemporary Taiwanese Horror Cinema offers a groundbreaking exploration of the resurgence of ghostly and supernatural motifs in Taiwan's contemporary film landscape. Against the backdrop of Taiwan's evolving cultural identity and its historical legacies, the book examines how horror cinema engages with issues such as memory, trauma, spirituality, and globalization. It traces the development of ghost representations from traditional folklore adaptations to postmodern horror comedies and art-house meditations, demonstrating how these films reflect Taiwan's ongoing negotiation of local and global forces. Through careful analysis of major works, including Detention, Incantation, Dead Talent Society, and Marry My Dead Body, the study highlights the rich, multifaceted uses of haunting as both aesthetic device and cultural metaphor.
The book adopts an interdisciplinary approach, bridging film studies, cultural theory, and media studies. It situates Taiwanese horror within broader cinematic and transmedia phenomena, such as the influence of J-Horror, the global boom of streaming platforms, and the intersections between queer representation and genre cinema. By doing so, Contemporary Taiwanese Horror Cinema not only sheds light on Taiwan's vibrant genre film production but also demonstrates the ways horror can serve as a flexible language for exploring societal anxieties, technological transformations, and evolving modes of storytelling. Particular attention is given to how films employ traditional ghost tropes alongside contemporary digital aesthetics, creating hybrid narratives that resonate with both local audiences and global viewers.
Aimed at scholars, students, and cinephiles, this book fills a significant gap in current literature by offering the first focused study on contemporary Taiwanese horror and ghost cinema. It articulates how spectral narratives provide a prism to decipher Taiwan's historical wounds, its cultural hybridity, and its imaginative responses to modernization and globalization. Contemporary Taiwanese Horror Cinema invites readers to reconsider the cultural significance of horror beyond clichés of fear and entertainment, positioning Taiwanese cinema at the forefront of critical conversations about memory, identity, and global media flows.