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Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho and Taxidermy

Fashioning Corpses

by Subarna Mondal

Type
Studies
Subject
One FilmPsycho
Keywords
Alfred Hitchcock, gothic
Publishing date
2025 (October 30, 2025) (Upcoming)
1st publishing
2024 (February 22, 2024)
Publisher
Bloomsbury Academic
Language
English
Size of a pocketbookRelative size of this bookSize of a large book
Relative size
Physical desc.
Paperback • 168 pages
6 x 9 inches (15 x 23 cm)
ISBN
979-8-7651-0122-3
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Book Presentation:
There are numerous scholarly works on Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho (1960). Some of these works have explored its Gothic potentials. However, no detailed effort has yet been made to explore one of its major motifs – taxidermy. Taxidermy as an art of corporeal preservation has effectively been used in mainstream body horror films years after Psycho was released. Yet Psycho was one of the first films to explore its potentials in the Gothic genre at a time when it was relegated to a low form of art. Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho and Taxidermy focuses on taxidermy as a cultural practice in both Victorian and modern times and how it has been employed both metaphorically and literally in Hitchcock's films, especially Psycho. It also situates Psycho as a crucial film in the filmic continuum of body horrors where death and docility share a troubled relationship.

About the Author:
Subarna Mondal is Assistant Professor in the Department of English at The Sanskrit College and University Kolkata, India. The author has completed her PhD from Jadavpur University, Department of Film Studies, India. Her areas of interest include late-Victorian Gothic literature, the Gothic on screen, and the films of Alfred Hitchcock. She has been teaching English literature to undergraduate and postgraduate students for the past 14 years.

Press Reviews:
"No one watching Psycho can fail to be creeped out by the stuffed and mummified beings Norman Bates surrounds himself with. But Subarna Mondal's extensively researched and endlessly provocative study Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho and Taxidermy: Fashioning Corpses deepens our understanding of the resonant rightness of Norman's avocation that, alas, perfectly represents a disturbing notion of what it is to be human. Mondal expertly surveys the cultural and psychological filiations of taxidermy in the Victorian world that Hitchcock came from, the modern world he inhabited, and the postmodern world he foresaw, and it now unforgettably demands our attention as a particularly revealing specific and synecdochic dark art investigated, portrayed, and practiced by one of our darkest cinematic artists." ―Sidney Gottlieb, Professor of Communication and Media Studies at Sacred Heart University, USA, and Editor of the Hitchcock Annual

"Subarna Mondal's analysis of Taxidermy in relation to Hitchcock's films is quite engaging and a departure from conventional Hitchcock studies. The culture of taxidermy or any other ritual which evokes 'mummy complex' is central to the realism of photographic images. What makes Subarna Mandal's thesis more meaningful is positioning her look around the basic Oedipal form of the narrative to accommodate a kind of litterariness available in fictional representations. By locating Psycho's cruelty and violence inside the broad domain of Gothic tradition of literature, she has tried to rescue and rehabilitate Norman Bates, apparently a psychotic Mama's boy, outside the territory of a morbid horror film. The author develops a deep structural link operating through generic differences of written words and audio-visual images. It is for this perspective that the montage representation becomes an 'otherness' and generates a typical category of 'literary montage'. What was destined to become a brilliant thriller, contests and alters its position and turns into a symbolic attestation of 'sickness' of contemporary civilization. Subarna Mondal's argument helps us to navigate through the philosophy of crime which began in Crime and Punishment so prophetically described by Dostoevsky. A commendable signature of scholarship, the thesis on taxidermy in Hitchcock films reconsiders the location of scopophilia in the modern paradox. Lucid enough for a good read, this book may is a significant addition to the world of film and culture studies." ―Sanjoy Mukhopadhyay, Independent Scholar, Translator, and Columnist, India

See the publisher website: Bloomsbury Academic

See Psycho (1960) on IMDB ...

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