Episode 017: Werewolves as Metaphors for People with Disabilities

AnDread, Joshua T. Anderson, and Matthew Connolly discuss werewolves as metaphors for disability, mental illness, addiction, female puberty, and the tragic outsider! Discussion of The Wolf Man (1941), Ginger Snaps (2000), and An American Werewolf in London (1981)!

Poster for The Wolf Man. At the top is the Wolf Man’s furry, snarling head. Below is a prone woman, eyes closed. Across the middle is the title THE WOLF MAN. To the right is the cast list.
Poster for Ginger Snaps. Across the top is the title, GINGER SNAPS. Below, the words “They don’t call it the CURSE for nothing.” At bottom, the heads and shoulders of Ginger and Brigitte. Cast list across the top.
Poster for An American Werewolf in London. David and Jack look to the left, a full moon over their shoulders. Below them the title, AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON: THE MONSTER MOVIE. At the top left corner, text: “FROM THE DIRECTOR OF ANIMAL HOUSE…A DIFFERENT KIND OF ANIMAL…”

Intro

Werewolf Discussion  32:00

  • The wolf as an endangered/persecuted animal – connects to werewolves as misunderstood characters
    • Barry Lopez’s Of Wolves and Men – great book about wolves in culture, science, relation to humans
    • Werewolf/disability connections
      • The werewolf/shapeshifter archetype from Stephen King’s Danse Macabre – a metaphor for mental illness and addiction – linked to Robert Louis Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
      • Werewolf as collision of binaries – good/evil, tame/wild, human/animal
      • Freud’s “The Wolf Man” – a “taming” of the mind
      • Werewolf story as a story of queer desire that must be controlled/restrained – queer subtext of Jekyll and Hyde; restraints as trope of werewolf movies/chains as dominant image
      • Excess and the “return of the repressed” – werewolf transformation is the eruption of repressed identity or desire
      • Learning to see yourself as abject – connects to all forms of marginalized identities, passing narratives (race, sexuality)
      • James Baldwin – Americans have terror of inner/private self becoming public – werewolf is secret self externalized
      • Werewolf as liberatory – cannot help but transform, boundaries crossed, social conventions defied, temporary power
      • Tied to setting – site of original “infection” usually rural, primal place, place of the Other
      • Clinical lycanthropy – delusional disorder in which someone believes that they have a wolf’s body or their body is turning into a wolf’s body
      • Doctor, priest, or officer of the law – can’t explain/control werewolf
    • Werewolf lore
      • Bite/infection element – invented by The Wolf Man, not part of actual werewolf lore (through sorcery, magic, or curse)
      • Full moon/lunacy
      • Killed by silver
      • Connection to indigenous cultures
      • Transformation scene as set-piece – painful experience – connection to acquired disability
      • Increased aggression, signs of the wolf while human
      • Werewolf is protagonist

Individual film discussions  1:30:20

  • AnDread: The Wolf Man (1941)
    • Josh: Ginger Snaps (2000)
    • Matt: An American Werewolf in London (1981)

Guest plugs

You can find Matt and Josh on Facebook and Josh on Twitter @catahoulajosh

Check out the work of Stephen Graham Jones, a horror writer who has covered slashers, werewolves, and much more in his fiction. Josh is a big fan of his stuff and is the secretary of the Stephen Graham Jones Society.

Josh’s recent publications:

Anderson, Joshua T. “Playing Dead.” Bourbon Penn, no. 14, Sep. 2017.

—. “Hard Water.” North American Review, vol. 305, no. 2-3, summer/fall 2020.

—. “Mongrel Transmotion: The Werewolf and the Were/Wear/Where-West in Stephen Graham Jones’s Mongrels.” Weird Westerns: Race, Gender, Genre, edited by Kerry Fine, et al., University of Nebraska Press, 2020.

Plugs and Wrap-Up  2:18:04

There will be a transcript for this show in the future. Please contact freaksandpsychospodcast@gmail.com for any accessibility concerns.

Please follow and like us:
error0
fb-share-icon0
fb-share-icon20
Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.