Don't Fear The Reaper: The Horror Film and Us

Overview

This course offers an introduction to the western horror film (a future companion course will address non-western contributions). Firmly established in the silent films of the 1920s, the genre has remained vital, while struggling against critical dismissal as trivial or disreputable and rarely receiving awards nominations for non-technical achievements. However, recent successes such as Get Out (Peele, 2017) and The Shape of Water (Del Toro, 2017) have gained critical acclaim while foregrounding the genre’s longstanding and central concern with identity issues. We explore key examples from horror film history in which the monstrous has reinvented itself over the last one hundred years or so.

Our critical understanding will be shaped by arguments that have developed, especially, since the critical revisions of the late 1970s, in which a combination of textual and theoretical writings refreshed approaches that for many years seemed embarrassed by the genre's raw material and implications. While early accounts of the horror film’s debt to the Gothic produce fascinating accounts of changing ideas of the self, later readings embrace the physicality of the monstrous, not least in relation to the body’s centrality in contemporary culture. Alongside this is the acknowledgement that horror fan culture has, since the grand guignol, always embraced the lurid spectacle of physical horror; despite the common restoration of social order in horror narratives, fan culture points to the true hero of the genre being the monster.

Our discussions will engage with filmmaking and critical accounts that have shaped understanding of the horror genre’s response to radical social and cultural change as we address issues of childhood, the family, race, gender and sexuality. One central argument is that the genre’s changing composition of the monstrous reveals social unease at these changes, and that the recurrent figures of the genre – vampires, zombies, the undead – offer politically charged insights into society and its discontents.

Finally, we will chart the increasing tendency for self-awareness in the horror film as it draws upon and plays with the rich legacy of its own generic past.

Programme details

Courses starts: 21 Apr 2026

Week 1: Horror Film in the Silent Era – Germany, Denmark, Sweden

Week 2: Universal and RKO Horror Films of the 1930s and 40s

Week 3: Hammer Horror Films

Week 4: American Horror Films of the 1970s and 1980s

Week 5: Screening and Discussion: The Thing (Carpenter, 1982)

Week 6: The Italian giallo, the slasher film

Week 7: Horror and gender, the monstrous feminine

Week 8: Spanish language horror film

Week 9: Folk Horror

Week 10: Horror Noire  

Certification

Credit Accumulation Transfer Scheme (CATS) Points

Only those who have registered for assessment and accreditation will be awarded CATS points for completing work to the required standard. Please note that assignments are not graded but are marked either pass or fail. Please follow this link for more information on Credit Accumulation Transfer Scheme (CATS) points

Digital Certificate of Completion 

Students who are registered for assessment and accreditation and pass their final assignment will also be eligible for a digital Certificate of Completion. Information on how to access the digital certificate will be emailed to you after the end of the course. The certificate will show your name, the course title and the dates of the course attended. You will be able to download the certificate and share it on social media if you choose to do so.

Please note students who do not register for assessment and accreditation during the enrolment process will not be able to do so after the course has begun.

Fees

Description Costs
Course fee (with no assessment) £300.00
Assessment and Accreditation fee £60.00

Funding

If you are in receipt of a UK state benefit, you are a full-time student in the UK or a student on a low income, you may be eligible for a reduction of 50% of tuition fees. Please see the below link for full details:

Concessionary fees for short courses

Tutor

Dr Pete Boss

Pete is Senior Lecturer in Film at Oxford Brookes University and has taught in adult education for many years on Hollywood and International Cinema. He is also a Blues Guitarist.

Course aims

To critically explore the horror genre in western cinema from the 1920s to the present.

Course objectives:

  • To establish a critical overview of major phases in the horror film genre’s development in the West
  • To introduce key horror films representative of major themes and aesthetic developments in the genre.
  • To discuss critical debates that have shaped the changing understanding of the horror genre.

 

Teaching methods

Short Lectures and seminar discussions of key films as well as extended consideration based on three full screenings.

Some use of group work to inform discussion.

Learning outcomes

By the end of the course students will be expected to:

  • Have a familiarity with a range of key horror films and their central issues.
  • Be able to discuss horror cinema in relation to critical issues in genre studies.
  • Be able to discuss and write about horror film by applying critical genre and film studies terminology and concepts.

Assessment methods

A written essay of 1500 words, as summative assessment. Students will also be able to submit a 500 word formative assignment during the course.

Only those students who have registered for assessment and accreditation will submit coursework.

 

Application

To be able to submit coursework and to earn credit (CATS points) for your course you will need to register and pay an additional £60 fee per course. You can do this by ticking the relevant box at the bottom of the enrolment form or when enrolling online. Please use the 'Book now' button on this page. Alternatively, please complete an Enrolment form for short courses | Oxford University Department for Continuing Education

Students who do not register for assessment and credit during the enrolment process will not be able to do so after the course has begun. If you are enrolled on the Certificate of Higher Education you need to indicate this on the enrolment form but there is no additional registration fee.

Level and demands

The Department's Weekly Classes are taught at FHEQ Level 4, i.e. first year undergraduate level, and you will be expected to engage in a significant amount of private study in preparation for the classes. This may take the form, for instance, of reading and analysing set texts, responding to questions or tasks, or preparing work to present in class.

This course assumes some familiarity with the horror genre, but key readings will be provided and extracts/screenings will be used in the weekly lectures/discussions