<p>‘This outstanding collection spans the wide career of this unique figure in British popular culture. Taking Kneale as a palimpsestic writer, we find an admirably suitable approach in a volume which uncovers, extracts, and reveals... Like one of Kneale’s protagonists, the reader is taken on a compelling journey into the vision and creativity of a complex genius'Professor Richard J. Hand, University of East Anglia</p>
Nigel Kneale’s writing career spanned the second half of the twentieth century, arguably contributing to the shape of British television drama, as well as having lingering influence in science fiction and horror. This collection focuses on Kneale’s horror writing, particularly in film and television. Taking a number of different academic perspectives, the chapters approach questions of medium, adaptation, genre, and style, emphasising the role that time plays in Kneale’s horror, and how he connected to wider cultural concerns. The work covered includes more famous productions, such as the Quatermass serials, The Woman in Black and Nineteen Eighty-Four, as well as some that have received less attention, including the social horror of Kneale’s film adaptations of Look Back in Anger and The Entertainer, ‘lost’ productions such as ‘The Chopper’ and Bam! Pow! Zap!, and unproduced work such as The Big, Big Giggle. Drawing on archival sources, including Kneale’s own archives, alongside the productions themselves, the collection portrays Kneale as a writer deeply concerned with society and social change, with the potential and responsibility of the media, and not as a horror writer, but a writer deeply concerned with the horrific.
Nigel Kneale’s writing career spanned the second half of the twentieth century, arguably contributing to the shape of British television drama, as well as having lingering influence in science fiction and horror.
Introduction: Nigel Kneale and Horror
Derek Johnston
MEDIUM
“People don’t believe nothing nowadays unless they’ve seen it on the telly”: Nigel Kneale’s Televisual Gothic
Brontë Schiltz
Sonic Haunting in Nigel Kneale’s Ghost Stories
Derek Johnston
Televising the Future: Nineteen Eighty-Four (1954), Nigel Kneale and Dystopian Horror
Robin Bunce
CULTURE
“Stop it! turn it off!”: Kneale, Mass Culture and the Horror of Youth
Rehan Hyder
Affirmation/Negation: Multicultural Integration in Nigel Kneale’s The Abominable Snowman and ‘Murrain’
Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni Berns
TIME
The Palimpsest of Time: Quatermass and the Pit, ‘The Road’ and The Stone Tape
J.S. Mackley
Round the Ring Stones: Nigel Kneale and Megaliths
Marcus Harmes and Mark Fryers
GENRE
Look Back in Unease: Nigel Kneale and Social Realist Horror
David Cottis
Beasts: ‘Baby’ – Folklore, Folk Horror and Eeriness Onscreen
Diane A. Rodgers
Afterword: Conclusions and Continuations
Derek Johnston