This article draws a direct historical throughline between the AIDS epidemic, the Satanic Panic and the ‘warlock film’ in the 1980s to suggest that this particular movie monster served as a microcosm for the homophobic moral hysteria pervasive in the decade. Through a series of case studies and building on the work of Christina Knopf, among others, I argue that this scapegoated figure functions as an occluded form of conservative ‘morale-boosting entertainment’ during this era, made both ridiculous and fearsome in the popular imagination as a means of expressing normative fears of social change.
Payton McCarty-Simas (Wed,) studied this question.