A language for grief: Writing horror in fiction and poetry

By | 11 May 2026

Works Cited

Al-Asaad, Faisal. ‘Bearing Witness in a Time of Spectacle’. Overland Literary Journal.

Human Rights Watch. ‘Philippines’ War on Drugs’. HRW.org, 2019.

McCready, Alastair. ‘“No Evidence” Australia’s Bondi Gunmen Trained in the Philippines: Official’. Al Jazeera, 18 Dec. 2025.

Millar, Becky, and Jonny Lee. ‘Horror Films and Grief’. Emotion Review, vol. 13, no. 3, July 2021, pp. 171–82.

Moreno, Gus. ‘How Horror Mirrors the Irrevocability of Grief’. Literary Hub, 29 Oct. 2021,

Tudor, Andrew. 1997. ‘Why Horror? The Peculiar Pleasures of a Popular Genre’. Cultural Studies 11 (3): 443–63, doi:10.1080/095023897335691.

Victoria, Eliza. What Comes After. University of the Philippines Press, 2022.

Victoria, Eliza. Ascension. Penguin Random House Southeast Asia, 2024.

Walwicz, Ania. ‘Australia’. The Penguin Book of Australian Women Poets. Edited by Hampton, Susan, and Llewellyn, Kate. Penguin, 1986, pp. 230-231.

This entry was posted in ESSAYS and tagged . Bookmark the permalink.

Related work:

  • No Related Posts Found

Comments are closed.