Crime & Pop Culture Office Hours
Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2561761/fan_mail/new] The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) is widely regarded as one of the most influential horror films ever made. Over the past fifty years, it has grown into a sprawling franchise of sequels, remakes, prequels, and reboots that have continually reimagined Leatherface, his family, and the rural landscape they inhabit. But what does this franchise actually tell us about rural America, crime, justice, family, and the cultural meanings attached to place? In this episode of Crime & Pop Culture Office Hours, host Kevin Buckler examines one of popular culture's most enduring and influential portrayals of rural crime and violence. This episode explores The Texas Chain Saw Massacre franchise through the lens of the American Crime Landscapes series. We examine how the films transformed isolated rural spaces into landscapes of fear, how documentary realism blurred the boundary between fiction and reality, and how changing sequels reflected evolving American anxieties from the 1970s through the 2020s. Along the way, we explore the franchise's connections to the Ed Gein case, the symbolic role of gas stations and other transition institutions, intergenerational violence, blood loyalty, degeneracy, conspiracy culture, institutional corruption, urban-rural conflict, and the remarkable ways each film reconstructed rural America to reflect the fears of its own era. More than a horror franchise, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre offers a fifty-year cultural history of how Americans have imagined rural landscapes, family, violence, and justice. Join us as we examine why Leatherface became an enduring cultural icon, how the franchise reshaped the popular imagination of rural America, and why its influence extends far beyond horror cinema. *Part of the American Crime Landscapes series.
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