Occult Detectives

deadline for submissions: 
September 29, 2024
full name / name of organization: 
Philip Smith

CFP: Occult Detectives

 

Edited by Michael Goodrum, Kris Mecholsky, and Philip Smith

 

The occult detective has a long history. Depending on how one defines the genre, occult themes coincide with the earliest detective fiction and theatre, 公案小說 (gong'an, or crime-case) stories from the Song dynasty (13th-14th century), which often featured supernatural appearances and interventions. To Anglophone audiences, however, the figure is, perhaps, most closely associated with the decades that followed the founding of the Society for Psychical Research in London in 1882. While Sherlock Holmes dedicated much of his efforts to exploding notions of the supernatural, most famously in The Hound of the Baskervilles (1902), other detectives both drew on and fought against the occult. Making his debut in 1898, Flaxman Low is perhaps the first to fit the (inevitably) loose model of the occult or psychic detective. Driven by a late Victorian interest in the occult and ghost-hunting, though, Low was rapidly followed by a stream of successors, a connection that continues to the present with new detectives appearing well into the 21st century in a wide variety of media (including novels, short stories, comics, theatre, television, film, games, and more). Horror and crime fused in weird fiction in the pulps; in comics such as Hellblazer and Dead Boy Detectives; in video games such as Alan Wake and Alone in the Dark; in TV shows such as Twin Peaks and True Detective; and in films such as The Exorcist III and The Sixth Sense, to name just a few.

 

The editors seek essays of ~4,000 words. Topics should include occult detectives and any text which sits at the intersection of detective and horror narratives. Texts can be of any medium or time period. Some possibilities include, but are not limited to, the following figures, genres, or texts:

 

  • Gong’an (Judge Dee and/or Judge Bao in any medium)

  • Abraham Van Helsing (in any medium)

  • Flaxman Low

  • John Silence

  • Luna Bartendale

  • Carnacki the Ghost-Finder

  • Fantastic/horror noir (e.g., Night Has a Thousand Eyes, Angel Heart)

  • Hellblazer and John Constantine (in comics and film)

  • Hellboy (in comics and film)

  • The Exorcist series (in novels and film)

  • Stephen King (in any medium)

  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel (in television, film, and comics)

  • The X-Files

  • Twin Peaks

  • Supernatural

  • Alan Wake

  • Ed Brubaker’s Fatale

 

Essays should be accessible but touch on big ideas, using a single text, author, artist, or director as a lens to comment on the genre(s) and themes at play. We particularly encourage contributions that take an international, cross-cultural perspective, and/or touch on topics of queerness, ethnicity, gender, and disability.

Proposals of up to three hundred words due by 29 September 2024 to occultdetectivesbook@gmail.com Final drafts for accepted proposals will be due by 30 March 2025. Each essay will be subject to editorial review; authors should expect to undertake at least one round of revisions before final acceptance.