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THE STATE OF THE GENRE: The Monster Outside the Closet
July 05, 2009
by Nicholas Kaufmann
In the letters column of the April 2009 issue of Rue Morgue magazine, a reader named Jerry Diego writes, "As a gay man who loves horror, I've rarely felt like the horror community embraces anything about us (other than killing us horribly in movies)...[yet] I know that not every horror fan is a single white male, testosterone-fuelled, T&A-loving homo-basher like every single forum of every horror site seems to suggest."
As someone who used to frequent horror message boards before I realized life was too short to spend that much time wading through nonsense, I've seen firsthand the macho, anti-gay attitude that can be prevalent in the horror community. And I'm not the only one. A friend of mine was once called a "faggot" by some knuckle-dragger on a horror message board because he dared to admit he preferred the highly stylized prose of Caitlin R. Kiernan to the more bare bones, story-over-craft approach of some other writers. It doesn't just happen on the message boards either. At the annual Gross Out Contest of any given World Horror Convention -- an event that is often hilariously and quite intentionally funny in its over-the-top descriptions of grotesquerie -- you're bound to find at least one storyteller who includes gay male sex in an attempt to "gross out" the audience. I've even read a handful of stories that end with a male villain getting his comeuppance through rape by another male character.
Frankly, I don't understand anti-gay sentiment anywhere in society, but in the horror genre I find it particularly head-scratching. After all, horror fiction tends to be as much about outsiders as gay and lesbian fiction is. The protagonists of both often find themselves moving through the fringes of society and pitted against forces more powerful than themselves. In the U.S. and other countries, gay and lesbian citizens frequently find themselves considered "others" by society, whether it's being told by their neighbors and elected representatives that they don't have the right to marry like everyone else or being attacked on the street simply because of who they are. As strange as this corollary may sound, these real-life experiences, which are echoed in gay and lesbian literature, aren't that far off from what befalls the characters in horror fiction -- whether it's the majority deciding it has no room for the minority, such as in Richard Matheson's I Am Legend , or the threat of being attacked or murdered for no reason other than who one intrinsically are, such as in Clive Barker's Cabal (itself a powerful allegory for the gay outsider experience) -- or really any character in a zombie movie, in danger of being killed simply because they are alive. The horror genre truly has a lot more in common with gay and lesbian literature -- and by extension, gay and lesbian experiences -- than these closed-minded mouth-breathers seem to realize.
Luckily, this ridiculous macho brigade is hardly the true majority in the horror genre, despite sometimes being the most vocal, at least on those wacky message boards. As a genre, horror really does embrace all points of view, and in fact there are quite a few excellent gay and lesbian authors working in the field, as well as straight authors unafraid to write sympathetic, believable gay characters. In the former category, bestselling and award-winning horror writers like Clive Barker, John Saul, Steve Berman, Lee Thomas, Douglas Clegg and author/anthologist Michael Rowe spring immediately to mind. Interestingly, each of these authors has written plenty of straight protagonists just as compassionately and convincingly as gay ones, putting to rest any misbegotten idea that gay authors only write about gay characters. When Clive Barker came out publicly in the early 1990s, it forced a sea change in the way horror was perceived by its fans. Always a somewhat conservative genre in its frequent focus on people trying to preserve their way of life against outside forces, horror's fans changed with the times, evolved if you will, and realized there were more points of view to be mined in the genre than the typical suburban family moving into a house built on a cursed Native American burial ground.
As I mentioned, there are plenty of straight authors dealing with queer issues in the horror genre as well, either overtly or in subtext, such as Poppy Z. Brite, Anne Rice, Peter Straub, Gemma Files, Nick Mamatas, Livia Llewellyn, Nancy Kilpatrick, David Wellington, Sephera Giron -- even newcomer Nate Southard recently released a novella called "Just Like Hell," which features a gay football player who is kidnapped and tortured by his straight teammates once his secret gets out. None of these authors make use of mincing stereotypes or instances of WILL & GRACE syndrome, where characters talk about being gay but are never seen actually making out or having sex with someone. Because these authors know they don't have to sink to that level. They know that a strong horror story is a strong horror story, and convincing, believable characters -- gay or straight -- will always the key to that strength.
Are these gay and gay-friendly authors getting the recognition they deserve from horror fans? Well, just look at some of the names I've mentioned: Clive Barker, John Saul, Anne Rice, Peter Straub, Poppy Z. Brite -- these are hardly obscure, niche authors, they're bestsellers! Still, others are struggling for acceptance of their queer-themed work in horror circles. Lee Thomas' exceptional horror novel The Dust of Wonderland, for example, won the Lambda Literary Award, but wasn't even nominated for a Bram Stoker Award or an International Horror Guild Award. But it's not all gloom and doom for gay and lesbian horror written by those without national bestseller status to prop up their acclaim. Just this June, the queer horror anthology Unspeakable Horrors , edited by Dark Scribe Magazine editor Vince A. Liaguno and poet Chad Helder, won the Bram Stoker Award in the Best Anthology category, perhaps indicating a growing acceptance of this branch of horror fiction.
So the next time some meathead mouths off with some anti-gay nonsense on a horror message board, or even in person, take the time to namedrop Clive Barker, or mention how the most interesting characters in Shirley Jackson's classic The Haunting of Hill House are lesbians, or even remind them that the Gothic movement that started modern horror as they know it was filled with gay and lesbian subtext. Then stop reading the message boards, because really, life is too short for such nonsense.
-----
When he's not studiously avoiding horror message boards, Nicholas Kaufmann is a Bram Stoker Award-nominated author, reviewer and interviewer. For more regular doses of Kaufmannia, visit his blog at http://nick-kaufmann.livejournal.com or his website at http://www.nicholaskaufmann.com.
As someone who used to frequent horror message boards before I realized life was too short to spend that much time wading through nonsense, I've seen firsthand the macho, anti-gay attitude that can be prevalent in the horror community. And I'm not the only one. A friend of mine was once called a "faggot" by some knuckle-dragger on a horror message board because he dared to admit he preferred the highly stylized prose of Caitlin R. Kiernan to the more bare bones, story-over-craft approach of some other writers. It doesn't just happen on the message boards either. At the annual Gross Out Contest of any given World Horror Convention -- an event that is often hilariously and quite intentionally funny in its over-the-top descriptions of grotesquerie -- you're bound to find at least one storyteller who includes gay male sex in an attempt to "gross out" the audience. I've even read a handful of stories that end with a male villain getting his comeuppance through rape by another male character.
Frankly, I don't understand anti-gay sentiment anywhere in society, but in the horror genre I find it particularly head-scratching. After all, horror fiction tends to be as much about outsiders as gay and lesbian fiction is. The protagonists of both often find themselves moving through the fringes of society and pitted against forces more powerful than themselves. In the U.S. and other countries, gay and lesbian citizens frequently find themselves considered "others" by society, whether it's being told by their neighbors and elected representatives that they don't have the right to marry like everyone else or being attacked on the street simply because of who they are. As strange as this corollary may sound, these real-life experiences, which are echoed in gay and lesbian literature, aren't that far off from what befalls the characters in horror fiction -- whether it's the majority deciding it has no room for the minority, such as in Richard Matheson's I Am Legend , or the threat of being attacked or murdered for no reason other than who one intrinsically are, such as in Clive Barker's Cabal (itself a powerful allegory for the gay outsider experience) -- or really any character in a zombie movie, in danger of being killed simply because they are alive. The horror genre truly has a lot more in common with gay and lesbian literature -- and by extension, gay and lesbian experiences -- than these closed-minded mouth-breathers seem to realize.
Luckily, this ridiculous macho brigade is hardly the true majority in the horror genre, despite sometimes being the most vocal, at least on those wacky message boards. As a genre, horror really does embrace all points of view, and in fact there are quite a few excellent gay and lesbian authors working in the field, as well as straight authors unafraid to write sympathetic, believable gay characters. In the former category, bestselling and award-winning horror writers like Clive Barker, John Saul, Steve Berman, Lee Thomas, Douglas Clegg and author/anthologist Michael Rowe spring immediately to mind. Interestingly, each of these authors has written plenty of straight protagonists just as compassionately and convincingly as gay ones, putting to rest any misbegotten idea that gay authors only write about gay characters. When Clive Barker came out publicly in the early 1990s, it forced a sea change in the way horror was perceived by its fans. Always a somewhat conservative genre in its frequent focus on people trying to preserve their way of life against outside forces, horror's fans changed with the times, evolved if you will, and realized there were more points of view to be mined in the genre than the typical suburban family moving into a house built on a cursed Native American burial ground.
As I mentioned, there are plenty of straight authors dealing with queer issues in the horror genre as well, either overtly or in subtext, such as Poppy Z. Brite, Anne Rice, Peter Straub, Gemma Files, Nick Mamatas, Livia Llewellyn, Nancy Kilpatrick, David Wellington, Sephera Giron -- even newcomer Nate Southard recently released a novella called "Just Like Hell," which features a gay football player who is kidnapped and tortured by his straight teammates once his secret gets out. None of these authors make use of mincing stereotypes or instances of WILL & GRACE syndrome, where characters talk about being gay but are never seen actually making out or having sex with someone. Because these authors know they don't have to sink to that level. They know that a strong horror story is a strong horror story, and convincing, believable characters -- gay or straight -- will always the key to that strength.
Are these gay and gay-friendly authors getting the recognition they deserve from horror fans? Well, just look at some of the names I've mentioned: Clive Barker, John Saul, Anne Rice, Peter Straub, Poppy Z. Brite -- these are hardly obscure, niche authors, they're bestsellers! Still, others are struggling for acceptance of their queer-themed work in horror circles. Lee Thomas' exceptional horror novel The Dust of Wonderland, for example, won the Lambda Literary Award, but wasn't even nominated for a Bram Stoker Award or an International Horror Guild Award. But it's not all gloom and doom for gay and lesbian horror written by those without national bestseller status to prop up their acclaim. Just this June, the queer horror anthology Unspeakable Horrors , edited by Dark Scribe Magazine editor Vince A. Liaguno and poet Chad Helder, won the Bram Stoker Award in the Best Anthology category, perhaps indicating a growing acceptance of this branch of horror fiction.
So the next time some meathead mouths off with some anti-gay nonsense on a horror message board, or even in person, take the time to namedrop Clive Barker, or mention how the most interesting characters in Shirley Jackson's classic The Haunting of Hill House are lesbians, or even remind them that the Gothic movement that started modern horror as they know it was filled with gay and lesbian subtext. Then stop reading the message boards, because really, life is too short for such nonsense.
-----
When he's not studiously avoiding horror message boards, Nicholas Kaufmann is a Bram Stoker Award-nominated author, reviewer and interviewer. For more regular doses of Kaufmannia, visit his blog at http://nick-kaufmann.livejournal.com or his website at http://www.nicholaskaufmann.com.
3 comments
1. Good column. Back in the 80s when I really got into horror again, stuff like the Splatterpunks anthologies (where taboos were frequently broken) and Clive's Books of Blood made me think that horror was opening up and there was an "anything goes" feel to the genre. In some ways, it's gotten more conservative instead of more wild. And yet it's interesting how horror can be rigid and traditional in one way and also groundbreaking and open to new ideas at the same time.
Posted at 12:04 AM on July 06, 2009 by llsoares
Posted at 12:04 AM on July 06, 2009 by llsoares
2. Awesome STATE OF, as always, Nicholas! I think there is also a backlash sometimes-- if a straight writer writes something with a homosexual villain, some people call that writer out and chastise him/her. Rape is scary for any victim and there doesn't necessarily have to be homophobia involved. Sometimes writing about these subjects is tiptoeing on thin ice-- I believe it was Gord Rollo who not long ago had gay villain(s)in one of his books and he was questioned for it by some. I guess the bottom line is to not depict the type of sexual intercourse as evil, but the encounter/situation as evil. That's tricky with so many people that have differing views though. There are overly sensitive people on both sides of the issue.
Posted at 12:04 PM on July 06, 2009 by bkethridge
Posted at 12:04 PM on July 06, 2009 by bkethridge
3. Very engaging and thoughtful article, Nicholas. While I agree that there are several authors working in the genre who deal with homosexual themes in a realistic, repectful and thoughtful matter, I would also point out that the fact your column neglects discussion of any contemporary horror movies dealing with gay issues suggests that the far more high profile world of horror cinema tends toward homophobia or, at best, embarrassing stereotype. A perfect example is HELLBENT, a slasher movie marketed as a one of the first "gay horror" movies, and proved to be as campy and stereotypical as a Village People video. The genre as a whole has several examples of authors who are "gay friendly", but horror movies still have a long way to go.
Posted at 2:57 PM on July 08, 2009 by gregory-kurczynski
Posted at 2:57 PM on July 08, 2009 by gregory-kurczynski





