Research Article

The Uncanniness of The Shining

Number: 24 July 24, 2020
TR EN

The Uncanniness of The Shining

Abstract

Stanley Kubrick’s 1980 film The Shining has been examined and analyzed countless times up until today. Even though 40 years have gone by since its release, the film’s full meaning and the events happening to the Torrance family are still unclear. The film unfolds in a limbo-like state, between dream and reality. While writing the script, Kubrick states that he was inspired by Sigmund Freud’s Das Unheimlich (1919) essay. According to Freud, things or people that arouse feelings of dread and horror belong to the realm of the uncanny. The uncanny is related to what is frightening, but more importantly it entails a duality, an ambiguity because it encompasses the familiar with the unfamiliar. This study aims to locate the uncanny elements in The Shining, while also examining how conflicting desires that have been repressed can come to the surface through the dream-like setting of the Overlook Hotel.

Keywords

uncanny,ego,ambiguity,repressed desires

References

  1. Ascher, R. (Director). (2012). Room 237 [Documentary]. United States: Film Sales Corp.
  2. Bettelheim, B. (1976). The uses of enchantment: The meaning and importance of fairy tales. London: Penguin Books.
  3. Ciment M. (2001). Kubrick: The definitive edition. (Gilbert Adair, Trans.). New York: Faber & Faber Inc.
  4. Cook. D. (1984). American horror: The Shining. Literature/Film Quarterly, 12 (1), 2-4.
  5. Creed, B. (1993). The monstrous feminine: film, feminism and psychoanalysis. London: Routledge.
  6. ____________. (2005). Phallic panic: Film, horror and the primal uncanny. Victoria: Melbourne University Press.
  7. Flannigan, M. (Director). (2019). Doctor Sleep [Motion Picture]. United Kingdom, Canada, United States: Warner Bros.
  8. Freud, S. (2001). The standard edition of the complete psychological works of Sigmund Freud: Volume XVII. London: Vintage Classics.
  9. Hoile, C. (1984). The uncanny and the fairy tale in Kubrick's "The Shining". Literature/Film Quarterly, 12 (1), 5-12.
  10. Jentsch, E. (2008) On the psychology of the uncanny. In J. Collins and J. Jervis (Eds.), Uncanny modernity: Cultural theories, modern anxieties (pp. 216–228), New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
APA
Erensoy, Ş. F. (2020). The Uncanniness of The Shining. Yedi, 24, 37-44. https://doi.org/10.17484/yedi.685208