This book positions the 'California Gothic' as a highly significant
regional subgenre which articulates anxieties specific to the
historical, cultural and geographical characteristics of the 'Golden
State'. California has long been perceived as a utopian space, but it is
also haunted by the spectres of European and Anglo-American imperialism,
genocide, racial and economic discrimination, natural disaster and
aggressive infrastructural and commercial development. Drawing on the
work of California historians and cultural commentators, this study
explores the ways in which the nightmarish flipside of the 'California
Dream' has been depicted within horror and Gothic.