Article
Details
Citation
Lindsay S (2023) The Transgressive Bodies of Dark Horse Comics¡¯ Aliens Line. Gothic Studies, 25 (3), pp. 245-260. https://doi.org/10.3366/gothic.2023.0174
Abstract
This article explores the strategies employed by Dark Horse Comics to develop the Xenomorph creature and its associated universe across the publisher¡¯s Aliens line of titles. Through analysis of three Aliens miniseries¡¯ story arcs that are representative of the line¡¯s narrative and structural innovation, my contribution explores how this corpus transgresses the parameters of the movie franchise¡¯s Science Fiction and action-horror genres in the following three ways. Firstly, I investigate the Aliens comics¡¯ introduction of dreams and psychological trauma associated with the literary Gothic past in Aliens: Sacrifice (March¨CJune 1993). Secondly, in keeping with the Gothic¡¯s comic turn, I examine the humorous, parodic, and self-referential elements of comics in Aliens: Stronghold (May¨CSeptember 1994). Thirdly, I explore Dark Horse Comics¡¯ critical understanding of negative nostalgia in preserving and transgressing the narrative structure and aesthetics of Alien (1979) in Aliens: Dead Orbit (April¨CDecember 2017). Ultimately, this article considers these three themes as examples of the paradoxically transgressive and restorative elements of Gothic that are apparent throughout Dark Horse Comics¡¯ Aliens line. It argues that the ways in which the Aliens line innovatively reworks these aesthetic and narrative features of the film franchise¡¯s visual and thematic origins provide a critical understanding of the productive interactions between comics and literary Gothic traditions.
Keywords
Dark Horse Comics; Aliens franchise; Gothic and comics; comic gothic; humour; transgression; body
Journal
Gothic Studies: Volume 25, Issue 3
Status | Published |
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Publication date | 30/11/2023 |
Publication date online | 30/11/2023 |
Date accepted by journal | 24/07/2023 |
URL | |
ISSN | 1362-7937 |
eISSN | 2050-456X |