A Craving for Horror: Based on the Works of Stephen King Stephen King’s work asserts macabre and grim moods to support that we are intrigued by horror films because ‘we’re all mentally ill’ (King‚ “Why We Crave Horror” 1). King uses “Strawberry Spring” to provide the reader a rush to show “that we are not afraid” of whatever grim scenes are to follow (King‚ “Why We Crave…” 1). He opens the story with a narrative of Gale Cerman’s death in which the narrator describes the unusually spine-chilling
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Stephen King’s presumptuous article‚ "Why We Crave Horror Movies"‚ inspects the inner‚ mentally psychotic adaptation of human beings‚ and explores our obsessive attraction to gruesome and tantalizing horror movies. He believes that we are all secretly morbid and insist on using scary films to produce our psychotic relief from the demanding civilized society we live in; King states‚ " I think we are all mentally ill; those of us outside of the asylums only hide it a little better ". He values the
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Stephen Leasock ’s "Arcadian Adventures With the Idle Rich": Satire Jonathan Swift has suggested that "Satire is a sort of Glass‚ wherein Beholders do generally discover every body ’s Face their own; which is the chief reason...that so few are offended with it." Richard Garnett suggests that‚ "Without humour‚ satire is invictive; without literary form‚ [and] it is mere clownish jeering." (Encyclopaedia Britannica 14th ed. vol. 20 p. 5). Whereas Swift ’s statement suggests that people are
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Stephen Crane’s "The Open Book": Determinism‚ Objectivity‚ and Pessimism In Stephen Crane’s short story "The Open Boat"‚ the American literary school of naturalism is used and three of the eight features are most apparent‚ making this work‚ in my opinion‚ a good example of the school of naturalism. These three of the eight features are determinism‚ objectivity‚ and pessimism. They show‚ some more than others‚ how Stephen Crane viewed the world and the environment around him. Determinism
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beheading in today’s time would be heinous and traumatizing. Rather we watch classic cabin in the woods films or an average family attempting to ward off a demon. Though the way we view horror has changed‚ the feelings those films bring us has not. In Stephen King’s
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This started a long love affair for horror stories. For instance Stephen King is known as the master of horror; I have read all his older novels. Watched a few of his movies and discovered the movies are ‘B’ rated compared to the books. His newer work is a little more farfetched for me more like Sci-Fi‚ but he was the cause for my thirst in horror and mystery. A case in point when summer was over‚ I started looking for Stephen King books on the shelves at school and discovered that they did not
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In Stephen Kings essay "Why We Crave Horror Movies" he claims that we are all mentally ill. According to King‚ people’s quirks are proof of this. The antidote to our mental illness‚ king says‚ is that we watch horror movies to "re-establish our feelings of essential normality". King also says that we watch them to satisfy the bad in us. We all do crazy things in our lives. Once in awhile we all want to thrash out on someone‚ to prove a point‚ or just to hurt them for the sake of hurting them. We
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In "The Open Boat" Stephen Crane uses the sea and four men adrift in a dinghy as a framework for communicating his ideas about life. The story‚ in my opinion‚ is a metaphor for life. The four men are helpless against the indifferent‚ yet overwhelming forces of nature. In "The Open Boat‚" Stephen Crane not only comments on the role of nature and God in the life of man‚ but the importance of community and brotherhood‚ and the nature of an individual ’s journey to knowledge. "The Open Boat" was written
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satisfaction‚ and surprisingly‚ celebrities are all things that lead to obsession. As people focus into these things‚ the result is utter and blatant madness‚ and eventually becomes the destruction of themselves and others. In the novel Misery by Stephen King‚ the mental instability of Annie Wilkes and the imprisonment of Paul Sheldon shows how obsession can lead to the destruction of others. Paul Sheldon was an author famous for his many books about an 18th century woman named Misery Chastain. The
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Movies" by the author Stephen king; He tries to explain how a two-hour horror film may be one’s way of stepping out of life’s boundaries and all the expectations on what is right and wrong. He states that it’s a relief of ones inner violence‚ a fix of adrenaline and fun and it dares the nightmare. You get to face your biggest fear from the comfort of your own home‚ and that’s not to say that a good horror movies can and will make you jump from your seat. In the essay Stephen stated‚ "If we are all
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