225
Horror Studies
Volume 6 Number 2
© 2015 Intellect Ltd Article. English language. doi: 10.1386/host.6.2.225_1
Keywords
gothic
television
neo-liberalism
national identity
United States
masculinity
torture
free market
Linnie BLaKe
Manchester Metropolitan University
all hell breaks loose:
Supernatural, gothic neo-
liberalism and the american
self
aBstract
Chronicling the power-struggles of angels and demons drawn broadly from the
Judaeo-Christian tradition and deploying a cast of vampires, ghosts, demons,
shapeshifters, tricksters, mad scientists, zombies and monsters from urban legends,
the TV gothic serial Supernatural is both a quintessentially American narrative and
a sustained critique of the internal contradictions of neo-liberalism. Revelling in the
mass cultural products of the United States, it incorporates the generic characteristics
of the western, the road movie and the mystery-thriller whilst evoking the formats of
the serial novel, the game show, the police procedural, reality television and gothic
film and television. Thus addressing the epistemological incertitude engendered by
the ‘grave economic distress’ (4:17) of the present, Supernatural charts the disjunc-
tion between public fantasies of free market freedoms and the trauma wrought to
social and psychological integrity by industrial decline and community breakdown.
What emerges is a terrifying picture of a country that has been plunged into exis-
tential chaos by neo-liberal economics. In the world of Supernatural, as in our own,
exceptionalist models of national identity have been dismantled, compromised or
exposed as ideologically expedient fantasies, whilst their neo-liberal substitutes have
made both the self and the socius unstable, fragmented and mutable. Freedom, the
protagonist Dean Winchester argues, is simply the rope God gives people to hang