Penn State Altoona faculty’s podcast features horror author Rachel Harrison

The logo for the Horror Joy podcast, featuring a skull speaking into a microphone

Penn State Altoona faculty members Brian Onishi and Jeff Stoyanoff have released a new episode of their "Horror Joy" podcastin which they discuss the 1992 film “Candyman” as the final entry in an “academic horror” course, focusing on how the movie links urban legend, the university, and racialized violence.

Credit: Jason Long, Spring Dam Designs

ALTOONA, Pa. — Penn State Altoona faculty members Brian Onishi, associate professor of philosophy, and Jeff Stoyanoff, assistant professor of English and of women's, gender and sexuality studies, have released a new episode of their "Horror Joy" podcast. In the latest episode, the hosts interview Rachel Harrison — author of “The Return,” “Such Sharp Teeth,” “So Thirsty” and “Black Sheep” — about the relationship between horror and joy, her writing origin story and her novel “Play Nice.”

Harrison describes horror’s joy as catharsis and a safe space for fear, anxiety, and “big feelings,” offering empowerment through survival and, as a writer, control. She recounts studying screenwriting, moving from Los Angeles to New York, working on TV jobs, writing short speculative fiction and publishing “The Return” in 2020.

Harris discusses finding community — especially through Clay McLeod Chapman and Nat Cassidy — during lockdown and navigating “cafeteria anxiety.” On haunted houses, she emphasizes home as supposed safety, and explores tropes of women not being believed; gaslighting; and emotional abuse, including “Play Nice’s” book-within-a-book framing. The author previews her upcoming work, “Kiss, Slay, Replay."

The full episode can be accessed on podcast providers or on Red Circle.

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