Hunger

Regular price €31.99
Title
Quantity:
Will Deliver When Available
Will Deliver When Available
14 days return policy Shipping & Delivery
AIDS
Category=ATFA
Category=ATFB
Category=ATMN
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
forthcoming
horror cinema
queer medical humanities
Tony Scott
vampirism

Product details

  • ISBN 9781807810580
  • Dimensions: 135 x 190mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Liverpool University Press
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
Secure checkout Fast Shipping Easy returns

The Hunger (1983) is usually praised for its surface elements: style, soundtrack, erotic cool. What lies beneath that surface is far less comfortable. This book approaches Tony Scott’s debut not as a cult artifact, but as a film that touches on anxiety just before it becomes legible. Set on the brink of the AIDS era, The Hunger reimagines vampirism as a condition defined not by power or immortality, but by bodily failure, dependency, and irreversible decline. What appears to promise transcendence instead produces slow destruction. Time does not stop; it accumulates.

Reading the film alongside Whitley Strieber’s novel, contemporary medical discourse, queer cultural history, and older mythic narratives of immortality, punishment, and decay, the author argues that in The Hunger, terror lies in what cannot be explained away: the body's slow betrayal and the impossibility of return. The Hunger’s lasting power is not aesthetic alone, but structural. It understands horror as endurance rather than shock, and as the knowledge that once the body is claimed, there is no exit.

Edmund P. Cueva is an award-winning Professor of Classics and Humanities at the University of Houston-Downtown. His interests include the ancient Graeco-Roman novel, myth, and the intersection of ancient literature and the occult.