Why we create monsters

Experts in various aspects of the macabre include several University at Buffalo faculty members who specialize in what many cultures find horrible and terrifying. 


The UB faculty specializations range from satanic practice, black magic and cultural monstrosities (like serial killers) to "real" and imagined vampires and zombies, as well as the bizarre Spanish gothic period in which our fascination with the utterly horrible is grounded. One expert includes greedy bankers and environmentally destructive corporations among the monsters of our time. 

All of these experts, described below, can discuss not only what frightens us, but how and why we create monsters to help us cope with cultural anxiety. 

Yes, Virginia, There Are "Real" Vampires 

John Edgar Browning is an Arthur A. Schomburg Fellow and PhD candidate in American Studies at UB. He has written several books and conducts research on the vampire. He specializes in the Dracula figure in film, literature, television and popular culture. 

"Vampires and monsters -- they're just us," Browning says. "They're what we aspire to be, what we're told to hate most about ourselves, what we secretly yearn for, but shouldn't." 

Browning is the author of several books, including "Draculas, Vampires, and Other Undead Forms," "Dracula in Visual Media: Film, Television, Comic Book and Electronic Game Appearances, 1921-2010" and "Speaking of Monsters: A Teratological Anthology." 

Browning has been invited to lecture on a Holland-American vampire-themed cruise next summer. 

The Monsters We Don't Recognize 

David Schmid, PhD, professor of English, focuses on cultural monstrosities -- those among us whom we perceive as "monsters" and the role they play in our self-perception as individual and social beings. Although his initial work in this field focused on the serial killer as an American popular-culture figure, he also studies how our society safely represents and addresses the anxieties of our time through the use of other monsters, such as zombies and vampires. 

He is the author of "Natural Born Celebrities: Serial Killers in American Culture," "True Crime," a companion to crime fiction, "The Devil You Know: Dexter and the 'Goodness' of American Serial Killing" and books on noir novels, murderabilia and murder culture.