Representation of woman in the horror genre
In horror films woman have been treated differently to men
since the beginning of horror films. If you look back to old horror films such
as Nosferatu you can see the girl in it is treated as the victim. This far back
girls were traditionally the weaker sex. This is shown in Nosferatu as the girl
has to be saved by a man from the monster. While we don’t know what Nosferatu
is we assume that he is male by the way he acts and looks. This shows that it
is a man who is powerful enough to harm the girl, and another man is powerful
enough to protect the girl whereas the girl has no power at all. This trend
continues of the villain being a disfigured man/monster and having the girl is
the victim protected by a man. An example of this would be the original Frankenstein
movie.
The antagonist or
monsters in horror films were all male until the 1930’s with the inclusion of
films such as Bride of Frankenstein and Vampyr. Woman in films at this point
had just started to change a little due to early feminism. A noticeable film
that was due to this is Val Lewton’s “Cat People”. The main antagonist in this
horror is female by the name of Irena. Irena changes in to panther when she is
aroused. This suggests that the films are giving across the message that
sexuality can be dangerous and can be dangerous in a conservative society. This
reflects men’s fears in society of woman becoming more powerful. In the film
Irena is depicted as foreign and is trying to hurt an American girl who is
depicted as accepting her traditional role as a woman in 1940’s America. This
shows that that the unknown and the different from the norm is be feared by
society and can be dangerous. Despite this female antagonist the film still has
the same premise as previous films. A man still defends a middle class white
girl from Irene. In the end of the film Irene is given the choice to become the
norm in society or die. She chooses to die.
in the 1950’s there were a lot more sci-fi horror films
reflecting America’s fears of society as the majority of people were scared of
nuclear war. In this time however woman in horror films still followed the
simple concept laid out by previous horror films. An example of this would be
invasion of the body snatchers where a woman is being protected by man but in
this case the woman dies for not being strong enough whereas the man survives.
The 60’s upped the scale as women were killed more frequently. An example of
this would be the famous Pshyco shower scene where Norman bates kills a girl in
the shower. The girl is suggested to be sleeping with a married man whereas
Norman is oppressed by his mother. So stabbing her in the shower could be
suggested to be his sexual frustration. At this point in horror films men were
represented as different age race and class whereas woman fit the same simple
mold which is white and middle class.
In the 70’s and 80’s the slasher genre had become the next
big thing and these films were being made. In slasher films it is often the
case that woman are being hunted down and brutally killed by an antagonist.
This is a reaction to the feminist movement that was happening at the time. The
victims in slasher films were often sexualised and the demographic was young
men.
In 1992 carol clover released a book called Men Woman and
Chainsaws: Gender in the modern horror film. In the book she coined the phrase “Final
girl”. A final girl is as the name implies, a girl who is the survivor in
horror films. She is usually depicted as being white and middle class whereas
other female counterparts in horror films are shown having sex and doing drugs
or other things that go against the conservative ideology. The final girl
usually resembles an adolescent boy rather than a girl in the way she acts and
usually has a name that is satiable for both males and females like Jesse. This
done so the male audience can relate to this girl and not with the killer. A good
example of this is the film “House of wax” where in the film a girl called
Carly (A unisex name) she is white and middle class and is aspiring to be a
fashion designer. This everything someone should be in a conservative society.
Another female character in the film called Paige, she is shown performing
sexual acts in the film despite not being married. She is also revealed to be
pregnant in the film. All of this would be considered wrong in a conservative society
and according to this theory must die(which she does). This therefore backs up
the “final girl” theory.



