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Against Everyone with Conner Habib

AEWCH 306: WHAT IS HORROR? with PHIL FORD & J.F. MARTEL of WEIRD STUDIES

Against Everyone with Conner Habib

Against Everyone With Conner Habib

Religion & Spirituality, Spirituality

4.8699 Ratings

🗓️ 28 October 2025

⏱️ 110 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Friends,
When I was on my book tour for Hawk Mountain, I did an event with Andrea Lawlor where we spoke, at length, about horror. In the Q&A, someone raised a hand and asked:

WHAT IS HORROR?

Andrea and I both laughed. We found ourselves at a loss.

Horror :
Once you consider it, it’s not clear.
There’s the assumption that horror is scary. Sometimes that’s true. But obviously what’s scary for you might not be scary for me, and vice versa, so that can’t define the genre. We say horror has certain elements, but there are different kinds of horror to define its contours, whether it's body horror, slasher horror, cosmic horror...
We might turn to the familiar face of horror - the monster - to see what they reveal to us. But while vampires, werewolves, zombies express, through their differing powers and weakness, different theories about horror, they can't give us a picture of what it is really. They're contained by it.

Horror: Always on, always available, always around us. So… what is it?

I asked my friends PHIL FORD and J.F. MARTEL - the cohosts of the WEIRD STUDIES PODCAST - onto the show to walk into the dark - or is it the blinding, malevolent light? - with me, and with you, to see what we would find there.

Weird Studies is, in my experience of it, anyway, a horror podcast. In fact, my last conversation with Phil and J.F. was on Weird Studies and about horror: on Weird Studies 144, we looked into Clive Barker's Hellraiser and the book it's based on, The Hellbound Heart.

But it's not a horror podcast because it’s always focused on horror; many episodes are about topics and artworks that seem less than horrific (their series on each card in the major arcana of the tarot, for instance, or their episode on Herman Hesse’s novel about enlightenment, Siddhartha).

But there is a quality on each episode - a quality which we discuss in this conversation - of the threat of art, philosophy, image and sound. The way they invade our lives. Rearrange our organs Destroy the world we knew. 

In other words, we might think of horror as a position in time, something approaching or orbiting. Or as something creates shadows by blocking the light, or by creating a void where an object once was. 

You can hear me going in many directions again. Conversation with Phil and J.F. inspires that in me - being pulled in many directions at once. That's another way of thinking of horror: horror as blob; as spreading epidemic, as destroying giant, vaster than the safety of our shelters.

This is what I love about talking with Phil and JF and about Weird Studies, and also why I often think of their podcast as the only true sibling to mine. In conversation with them, everything a springboard for everything. A web of connections. Or maybe better said, a transforming activity, everything metamorphosing into everything else through membranous, visceral, and expansive moves.

Please support this show on patreon.

PATREON.COM/CONNERHABIB

You can also find an almost complete list of the books, movies, etc we mention on this episode there.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello, friends. Welcome to Against Everyone with Connor Abeeb, Episode 306, where I talk with Phil Ford and J.F. Martel, the host of Weird Studies, one of my favorite podcasts, about what horror is.

0:16.5

As you'll hear me mention on the episode, I was on a book tour for my novel, Hawk Mountain,

0:24.1

when this question first came in in a threatening form.

0:29.2

I mean threatening because it was a surprise when it rose up and I couldn't answer it.

0:36.0

I was doing an event at Amherst Books in Amherst, Massachusetts,

0:40.0

with my friend, the author, Andrea Lawler, who wrote the excellent shape-changing sexual novel,

0:47.1

Paul takes the form of a mortal girl. Andrew was asking me great questions about Hawk Mountain, and of course we kept leaning towards questions of horror.

1:00.7

At some point, someone in the audience raised their hand and asked me, what is horror?

1:07.6

Andrea and I both looked at each other a bit gobsmacked. We found ourselves at a loss.

1:13.7

Obviously, that moment has stayed with me.

1:17.7

Horror. Once you consider it, it's not clear. There's the assumption that horror is scary.

1:24.6

Well, sometimes that's true, but obviously what's scary for you might not be scary

1:29.1

for me, and vice versa. So I can't define it. Maybe if we collected all the subgenres of horror,

1:37.7

we could come up with some grand shibboleth picture, body horror, slasher horror, cosmic horror. But I doubt we'd be able to look at it

1:47.9

for long enough without looking at some of the details and funneling ourselves into one of

1:53.9

those subgenres. We could try to turn to that most familiar face of horror. The monster

1:59.9

is a way to understand horror.

2:03.4

Vampires, werewolf, zombies, and so forth, all have differing powers and weaknesses,

2:08.9

and those all express theories about what horror is, and maybe about what life itself is.

2:15.9

But that's not going to get us very far either.

2:20.2

Horror is always on.

2:21.9

It's always available.

...

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