Urban Legends

and the Cultural Geography of Horror

Editor(s) Irena Jurković,Marko Lukić,Tijana Parezanović

Language: English

Genre(s): Literary Criticism, Media, Film and Theatre

Series: Horror Studies

  • January 2026 · 224 pages ·216x138mm

  • · Hardback - 9781837723256
  • · eBook - pdf - 9781837723263
  • · eBook - epub - 9781837723270

Blending folklore studies, media theory, horror criticism and cultural geography, this collection charts an unprecedented map of urban‑legend storytelling, from haunted cemeteries to pixelated backrooms. Across three themed sections, international scholars trace how tales of hook‑handed killers and countless other spectres migrate through oral tradition, cinema, television, board games and video games, to continually reshape the fears and identities of the communities that share them. By foregrounding space – the cemetery, the highway, the small town, the livestreamed haunted house – as a dynamic agent rather than passive backdrop, the book reveals how legends build cultural memory, police social boundaries and critique neoliberal landscapes. Interdisciplinary, globally-scoped and media‑agnostic, this volume moves beyond folkloric catalogues and genre surveys to show precisely where horror lives today – and why those locations matter.

Introduction
Urban Legends and Haunted Places
Grave Implications: The Richmond Vampire Legend and Cultural Revision Aíne Norris
Sacrifice Zones: Uncanny Geography and Spectrality in’Butcher’s Block’ Steven Kohm and Meg D. Lonergan
Geography and Supernatural Beliefs in Demian Rugna’s Horror Cinema Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni Berns and Canela Ailen Rodriguez Fontao
Urban Legends Across Spaces
A Cultural Geography of Paranoia in the 1990s US. Monsters of the Week, Urban Myths, and Conspiracy Theories in The X-Files Ilaria W. Biano
‘The Family Business’: Mobility and Patriarchy in the CW’s Supernatural Helen Pinsent
Rolling the Dice and Navigating Legends: Mixtape Massacre and Escape from Tall Oaks Alissa Burger
Urban Legends About and Within Digital Spaces
The Art of No-Clipping—Backrooms and Digital Horror Narratives Marko Lukić
‘He is Dying for Followers’: The Abject Workspace and the Co-Modification of the Urban Legend in Deadstream Victoria Santamaría Ibor
The Omnipresent Dread and Spatial Displacement in the Horror Video Game Killer Frequency Zlatko Bukač
Bibliography
Notes

Author(s): Marko Lukić

Marko Lukić is Professor of American Literature and Cultural Theory at University of Zadar. He is interested in spatiality, human geography and contemporary horror across literature and film.

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