Categories
News

Call for Chapters: The Mummy Edited Collection

Editors, Michele Brittany and Sean Woodard

Contact Email: mummybookproject@mcbrittany

Abstract Deadline: December 15, 2023

Chapter Drafts Deadline: June 15, 2024

The 1999 Universal reboot of The Mummy, starring the indelible duo of Brendan Fraser and Rachel Weisz, remains a tentpole of ’90s popular culture and cinema. Not only did The Mummy launch two sequels, a spin-off series, and a reboot, but it has lived on as a cult film, loved by fans for its mixture of horror, action/adventure, and humor. The film has also developed a strong meme culture on social media — one of the most viral examples contains a photo of a car bumper sticker proclaiming: “Honk if you’d rather be watching the 1999 cinematic masterpiece ‘The Mummy’ starring Brendan Fraser and Rachel Weisz.”

While academic research has been focused on various releases of The Mummy (1932, 1959, 1999, and 2017), there has not been a singular scholarly text devoted to the film franchise. The recent “Brenaissance” in Fraser’s film career and the film’s anticipated 25th anniversary in 2024 make it an appropriate time to celebrate and re-evaluate the film.

The purpose of this edited collection is to place The Mummy into a cultural and theoretical context, as well as critically analyze the franchise, its connections to other genre films, and its continued influence.

We seek proposals for chapters that approach the subject matter with theoretical concepts that will appropriately meet the rigorous expectations of an academic work, but through a prose style that shall be accessible for both an academic audience and a general readership.  

Topics may include, but are not limited to:

  • Resurgent interest in Brendan Fraser/”Brenaissance”
  • Stephen Sommers as an auteur
  • Representation of Egypt in popular culture and early filmic representation
  • Eastern mythology/culture/religion
  • Exoticism of non-western cultures
  • Post/De-colonialism
  • Heroic representation
  • Body horror
  • Eco-horror/Ecocriticism
  • Gender representation
  • Toxic depictions in film
  • Queer/LGBTQ+ representation
  • Meme/GIF culture
  • Psychoanalysis
  • Generational nostalgia
  • Element of music/film scoring
  • Genre hybridity
  • Film cycles/reboots/retcons (such as The Scorpion King, The Mummy animated series, Universal Classic Monsters, Hammer Studios, Dark Universe, etc.) and related adventure/archaeological-driven films (such as Ark of the Sun God, The Sphinx, The Librarian franchise, etc.)

Please send abstracts of 300 – 500 words with a working title and five (5) keywords, accompanied by a short third-person author bio (100 words max), to mummybookproject@gmail.com as a Word document. Final essays should be 6,000 – 8,000 words in length, including endnotes and bibliography, and be formatted according to the Chicago Manual of Style, 17th edition. The collection is being considered by a leading academic press.

Proposed Timeline

  • October 1, 2023 through December 15, 2023 — Call for Papers
  • January 15, 2024 — Notification of abstract acceptances sent to authors
  • January 15, 2024 through June 15, 2024 — Book chapters drafting period
  • June 15, 2024 through July 15, 2024 — Initial editorial review of submitted chapter drafts
  • August 1, 2024 through October 1, 2024 — Double-blind peer review period
  • October 1, 2024 through November 15, 2024 — Contributor revision period
  • December 1, 2024 — Final editorial acceptance decisions
  • December 1, 2024 through January 15, 2025 — Layout design, indexing, and proofing stage
  • January 16, 2025 through February 15, 2025 — Copies of chapter proofs sent to contributors for copyediting review
  • March 1, 2025 — Final manuscript submitted in hard copy and digital formats to publisher

Editor bios:

Michele Brittany is a writer, editor, podcaster, and artist. She edited James Bond and Popular Cultureand the Bram Stoker Award-nominated Horror in Space: Critical Essays on a Film Subgenre. She co-edited Horror Literature from Gothic to Post-Modern: Critical Essays and co-hosts H. P. Lovecast podcast with Nicholas Diak. She lives in Glendale, Arizona.

Sean Woodard (MA | MFA) is a PhD candidate in English at University of Texas at Arlington. He also serves as the Assistant Editor for Global Insight: A Journal of Critical Human Science and Cultureand the Film Editor for Drunk MonkeysHe has contributed chapters to the edited collections Journeys Into Terror: Essays from the Cinematic Intersection of Travel and Horrorand Bloodstained Narratives: The Giallo Film in Italy and Abroad. His research interests include horror cinema, the American West, psychoanalysis, fairy tales, and film scoring.

Categories
News

It’s a Wrap: Week Ending 04/04/2021

Mummies in News and Pop Culture

This past week, Liverpool University Press released The Life and Times of Takabuti in Ancient Egypt: Investigating the Belfast Mummy edited by Egyptologist Professor Rosalie David and bioarchaeologist Professor Eileen Murphy. Takabuti originally lived in Thebes during the 25th Dynasty and died around the age of 20 to 30 years old around 600 B.C.  Since 1835, she home has been in Belfast, Ireland.  She was believed to have died from a knife wound to her upper left shoulder, but the wound is now believed to have been caused by the blow of an ax.  Hence, this woman was likely the victim of murder by an Assyrian soldier or by her own people.  

**

The mention of animal mummies often conjure images of Ancient Egyptian mummified cats, ibises and other animals.  On IFL Science’s website, Rachael Funnell reported on a National Academy of Sciences study on mummified macaws found at burial sites in the Atacama Desert.  Dating back to 1100 – 1450 CE, these colorful birds were not native to the desert.  Their feathers were important symbols of wealth and the study revealed that macaws were transported alive to the desert and mummified at the burial sites, often in unusual positions.  Sadly, the study revealed that the birds were also not treated well while living. 

**

Facial reconstruction technology helps visualize what KV55 mummy may have looked liked.  Smithsonian Magazine’s Isis Davis-Marks reported the mummy, which was discovered in 1907, is significant because it is speculated to be King Tutankhamun’s father, Akhenaten, known as the heretical Pharaoh for introducing monotheism during the 18th Dynasty.  DNA testing established the mummy as the son of Amenhotep III and the father of Tutankhamun, which would point the identity of the mummy as Akhenaten.  The mummy’s age has been ascertained to be around 26 years old, however the historical records suggest that Akhenaten died around the age of 40.  Given the DNA results, perhaps the mummy is Akhenaten’s younger brother, Smenkhkare, of which little is known. 

**

And, in pop culture history….

March 29, 1916 marks the birth of cinematographer Jack Asher, who worked on Hammer Film Productions’ The Mummy directed by Terence Fisher and starred Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing. In a 1976 interview between Jan Van Genechten and Fisher (printed in Little Shoppe of Horrors #19), the conversation touched on lighting and photography, providing some insight into Asher’s craft: 

JVG: The lighting and photograph are of course also very important in your films… What exactly is everybody’s function in that respect when you are directing? Of the camera operator, the director of photography, you yourself…

TF: In England directors of photograph don’t want to interfere with their operators, as they do on the continent.  Continental directors of photography want to have more control over their operators than they do in England.  It can work both ways, but I think it’s easier for a film director to work with the camera operator, without actually interfering.  But let’s take the director of photography, or let’s call him lighting camera man.  You’ve got to leave his style to him.  Different lighting camera men have different styles of working.  Within each one’s style you can get a certain type of mood if you tell him what you’re aiming at.  If you want for instance an actor not to be seen in features but in silhouette, you tell him so.  In  the first rehearsal he will work from that.  Then again it is a co-operative thing between the director and the lighting camera man.  But you can’t tell him to change his style.  Each lighting camera man has his own individual style.  Jack Asher, who did the early Hammer ones, had a very distinctive style of lighting, which was quite different to Arthur Grant’s.  He had a more realistic approach to the situation.  Jack Asher’s was almost theatrical lighting with little tricks, like color slides placed over the lights and so on. 

JVG:  I think Jack Asher was also very emotional…

TF:  Oh indeed he was.  Indeed…

JVG:  Much more so than Arthur Grant…

TF:  Arthur Grant approached it with a more realistic interpretation.  But Arthur would give a good job if you told what you were aiming at.  If you asked him not to see people’s features and to do it with back-lighting, which is very important at certain moments within the field, he could give you almost theatrical lighting like Jack Asher did.  Which of the two is the best I don’t know.  I don’t know exactly how audiences react to this.  

**

March 30, 1998, saw the release of Bram Stoker’s Legend of the Mummy, directed by Jeffrey Obrow.  Starring Louis Gossett Jr., this film is based on Bram Stoker’s novel, The Jewels of Seven Stars (1903). According to Rotten Tomatoes, this mummy film scored 15%. 

**

March 31, 1973, George Woodbridge who placed P. C. Blake in The Mummy (1959, dir. Terence Fisher) passed away in London at the age of 66.  He started his acting career in the 1930s and made his film debut in 1940’s The Big Blockade (dir. Charles Frend).  He appeared in several horror films over the years. 

**

April 3, 1872, Arthur Byron was born in Brooklyn, New York and he played Sir Joseph Whemple in The Mummy (1932, dir. Karl Freud).  In the film, he led the 1921 archaeological expedition that found the ancient mummy, Imhotep (Boris Karloff). This was his third film role (of a total of 27 actor credits) according to IMDB.  Byron had a prolific career on Broadway spanning 1894 – 1939. 

**

April 4, 1976, George Pastell (birth name believed to be Nino Pastellides), who placed Mehement Bey in Terence Fisher’s 1959 The Mummy passed away at the age of 53 (heart attack).  Originally from Cyprus, Pastell’s Mediterranean physical appearance led him to be cast as “Eastern” characters, in other words, villainous characters.  He worked often in the spy genre at the height of its popularity in the 1960s including a role in the James Bond film, From Russia with Love (1963, dir. Terence Young).  He returned as “Hashmi Bey” in The Curse of the Mummy’s Tomb (1964, dir. Michael Carreras) another Hammer Film Productions and the second film in the production company’s mummy series of films.  In 1967, Pastell had a turn in another famous IP, Doctor Who, in which he played Eric Klieg in “The Tomb of the Cybermen” (episodes 1 – 4).