Although horror films have garnered academic investigation for decades, there's a difference between a campy slasher film and real explorations of sadism, crime, and entropy. If one were to posit a cinema of evil as its own distinct genre, what would it look like?

The Cinema of Evil

Eric Shorey at Online

Tue, Aug 4 at 8 p.m.   |   75 minutes
Olios: Drop-in classes led by professors


Philosopher Georges Bataille once posited that the real nature of evil — the implicit guilt of literature — could be discovered in a unique, dark canon of books that investigate the actual terror of the human condition: "We are overwhelmed by Kafka's honesty, which abrogates no rights for itself. Whatever the lesson contained in Genet's books, Sartre's defence is inadmissible," Bataille writes. His pantheon of evil covered not so much the atrocities of war or the ongoing machinations of violence, but instead provided cold insights about the indifference of cruelty. 
 
Although horror films have garnered academic investigation for decades, there's a difference between a campy slasher film and real explorations of sadism, crime, and entropy. If one were to posit a cinema of evil as its own distinct genre, what would it look like? What is the visual language of evil? How do our fantasies of evil become interpolated into a cinematic language and what are the themes and motifs of this proposed genre? Perhaps the cinema of evil, as Foucault suggested of transgression, is a bolt of lightning that through its violence shines a light on the limits of both society and our minds.
Teacher: Eric Shorey

Eric Shorey is a freelance pop culture blogger whose work has appeared in Nylon, Vice, Pitchfork, Rolling Stone, and MTV. He covers a wide range of topics including LGBTQ+ culture, horror, hip-hop, true crime, fashion, style, music, and sports. He received his MA in Liberal Studies from The New School for Social Research in 2010.


Venue: Online

Zoom link will be sent upon signup.


Add to Calendar Aug. 4, 20208 p.m. Aug. 4, 2020 America/New_York Think Olio | The Cinema of Evil Although horror films have garnered academic investigation for decades, there's a difference between a campy slasher film and real explorations of sadism, crime, and entropy. If one were to posit a cinema of evil as its own distinct genre, what would it look like? Online

What is Think Olio?


Think Olio is here to put the liberation back into the liberal arts.

Classically, the liberal arts, were the education considered essential for a free person to take an active part in civic life. To counter a humanities that has been institutionalized and dehumanized we infuse critical thinking, openness, playfulness, and compassion into our learning experience.

Read more about our mission, our story, and how we are doing this.

Scenius Membership

If Friday night lectures, museum field trips, and living room salons sound like your kind of thing, then you've found your people. We can't wait to welcome you to the Think Olio Scenius. More info


Stay in Touch


Instagram Mailing List Contact

Olio: A miscellaneous collection of art and literature.