Monsters in America: Our Historical Obsession with the Hideous and the Haunting (43 page)

James Cameron’s
The Terminator
has refracted these fears for almost three decades, providing modern America a forum to discuss the nature of humanity and its relationship to a techno-digital environment. A film trilogy that began in 1984 and continued into the 1990s, Cameron’s posthuman mythology has produced a television series, novels, comic books, and a 2009 follow-up film. This successful franchise imagines a future in which an artificial intelligence known as “Skynet” has unleashed a nuclear holocaust on humanity and mass-produced an army of predatory cyborgs to mop up the survivors. Humanity’s one hope is a man named John Connor, the founder and leader of the resistance. Mastering time travel technology, Skynet sends its agents, human-appearing assassins known as “Terminators,” into the past to kill Sarah Connor, John’s mother, before he is born. Failing at that in the first film, Skynet and its cyborg killers repeatedly try to kill the young Connor in the sequels.

The
Terminator
series combines the American fascination with religion and its anxiety over technological promise. John Connor is something of a messianic figure, and the day on which the machines will trigger nuclear destruction is known as “Judgment Day.” Religious questions about the nature of time and the meaning of the soul are key to the mythology’s development (this is especially the case in the television series
Sarah Connor Chronicles
).

The
Terminator
series suggests that our fear of posthuman possibilities may not be entirely related to a simple fear of technology. The
Terminator
mythos draws heavily on H. P. Lovecraft’s image of a universe full of beings devoid of human feeling and utterly indifferent to the human future. Rather than horrifying Cthulhu arising from his ancient sleep, the machines rise against humanity and seek to destroy them “without emotion, without pity, without remorse.”

Destruction of the social order at the hands of uncaring machines taps into very old human fears of powerlessness and meaninglessness in the face of an uncaring universe. Cameron’s dark vision can be seen to be oddly hopeful in this light. The most well-wrought iterations of the franchise,
T2: Judgment Day
and television’s
Sarah Connor Chronicles
, focus on the possibility of the cyborg learning human feeling and becoming part of a community through willingness to change and sacrifice. More than the atavistic primitivism of religious conservatism or the uncritical optimism of the futurists, Cameron’s
Terminator
offers hope based on integrating the monster into the human community, perhaps even creating that community based on the rejection of notions of monstrosity and ultimate difference.
17

That posthuman terrors have to be added to our list of possible monsters, along with sea serpents and serial killers, underscores the elasticity of the monster’s identity, the tendency of monsters to absorb the characteristics of the historical moment in which they appear. This book has refused to give a concise definition of the monster, assuming that no abstract definition exists. The creature we are hunting looks different in each historical era. In essence, every historical period decides what its monster(s) will be and creates the monster it needs. In fact, each historic epoch has a multitude of monsters, many of them representing warring discourses and basic cultural conflicts. The terror tales of the slave trade become symbols of a people’s oppression, while stories of frontier monsters become metaphors of conquest for the master class. In the twenty-first century, vampires can serve as traditionalist cautionary tales or
embodiments of alternative sexuality.

Frankenstein

 

Terminator

 

Monsters in America
has
looked at stories of the monster, told in different eras and by voices with differing interests, class positions, and racialized, gendered, or sexual identities. In contradiction to Craven’s
New Nightmare
, this book has suggested that stories do not so much contain the monster as give it life. Story and event, narrative and social structure are never truly separated. The subtext is always looming like a shadow in the text while the text comes to unnatural life in the social order. The victims of these tales are everywhere in American history, a landscape of corpses.

There is reason for hope. Greil Marcus writes that “cultural awakening comes not when one learns the contours of the master-narrative, but when one realizes … that what one has always been told is incomplete, backward, false, a lie.” Perhaps we can save the victims from the monster by calling into question the script. History is the work of human agency, and its mistakes can be corrected by human action. Understanding history will break its power, putting it in the grave where it belongs. Social justice can break the power of the monster, altering the structures of history and society so that the terror of history recedes.
18

Of course, they always come back. One of the conventions of modern horror is to portray the death of the monster and the restoration of the social order only to bring the thing horrifyingly back to life in the final frame. History is a bit like that. Despite the optimism of some posthuman theorists, there is no reason to see history as historical development, a narrative of upward ascent. A progressive vision of social justice can become a lie in much the same way that right-wing visions of American exceptionalism and innocence are nothing but happy bedtime stories for children rightfully afraid of the dark. There could be worse things waiting.

FILMOGRAPHY
 

Title

Date

Director

28 Days Later

2002

Danny Boyle

28 Weeks Later

2007

Juan Carlos Fresnadillo

Abbott and Costello Meet
Frankinstein
1948

Charles T. Barton

Alien

1979

Ridley Scott

American Psycho

2000

Mary Harron

American Werewolf in London, An

1981

John Landis

Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, The

1953

Eugène Lourié

Birth of a Nation

1915

D. W. Griffith

Bram Stoker’s Dracula

1992

Francis Ford Coppola

Bride of Frankenstein

1935

James Whale

Brood, The

1979

David Cronenberg

Candyman

1992

Bernard Rose

Carrie

1976

Brian De Palma

Dawn of the Dead

1978

George Romero

Day of the Dead

1985

George Romero

Deathdream

1974

Bob Clarke, David Gregory

“Deer Woman”

2005

John Landis

Diary of the Dead

2008

George Romero

Dracula

1931

Tod Browning

Dracula

1992

Francis Ford Coppola

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde

1932

Rouben Mamoulian

Earth vs. the Spider

1958

Bert I. Gordon

Exorcist, The

1973

William Friedkin

Frankenstein

1931

James Whale

Freaks

1932

Tod Browning

Friday the 13th

1980

Sean Cunningham

Friday the 13th, Part 3

1982

Steve Miner

Godzilla: King of Monsters

1956

Terry O. Morse

Gojira

1954

Ishiro Honda

Halloween

1978

John Carpenter

Hellraiser III

1992

Anthony Hickox

“Homecoming”

2005

Joe Dante

Horror of Dracula

1958

Terence Fisher

House of Dracula

1945

Erle C. Kenton

House of Frankenstein

1945

Erle C. Kenton

Howling, The

1981

Joe Dante

I Walked with a Zombie

1943

Jacques Tourner

I Was a Teenage Werewolf

1957

Gene Fowler Jr.

Invaders from Mars

1953

William Cameron Menzies

Invasion of the Body Snatchers

1956

Don Siegel

Invasion of the Saucer Men

1957

Edward L. Cahn

It Came from Beneath the Sea

1955

Robert Gordon

It’s Alive

1974

Larry Cohen

Jacob’s Ladder

1990

Adrian Lyne

King Kong

1933

Merian Cooper

Land of the Dead

2005

George Romero

Last House on the Left, The

1972

Wes Craven

Murders in the Rue Morgue

1932

Robert Florey

Nightmare on Elm Street, A

1984

Wes Craven

Night of the Living Dead

1968

George Romero

People Under the Stairs, The

1991

Wes Craven

Psycho

1960

Alfred Hitchcock

Rebel Without a Cause

1955

Nicholas Ray

Red Planet Mars

1952

Harry Horner

Rosemary’s Baby

1968

Roman Polanski

Scream

1996

Wes Craven

Silence of the Lambs, The

1991

Jonathan Demme

T2: Judgment Day

1991

James Cameron

Terminator, The

1984

James Cameron

Texas Chainsaw Massacre, The

1974

Tobe Hooper

Them!

1954

Gordon Douglas

Thing from Another World, The

1951

Howard Hawks

Wes Craven’s New Nightmare

1994

Wes Craven

When a Stranger Calls

1979

Fred Walton

Wolf Man, The

1941

George Waggner

Zombies of Mass Destruction

2009

Kevin Hamedani

Other books

Lady of Lincoln by Ann Barker
Cody by Kirsten Osbourne
Dead Dogs and Englishmen by Elizabeth Kane Buzzelli
The Ultimate Good Luck by Richard Ford
Polity 2 - Hilldiggers by Asher, Neal
Lovers in Enemy Territory by Rebecca Winters
Building Blocks by Cynthia Voigt