RT Article T1 Narrating Armageddon: Antichrist Films and the Critique of Late Modernity JF Journal of religion and popular culture VO 24 IS 2 SP 217 OP 229 A1 Gerlach, Neil 1963- LA English PB University of Saskatchewan YR 2012 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1692187368 AB The recurrence of the figure of the Antichrist in mainstream horror films is a culturally significant development since its origins in the 1970s. This paper argues that Antichrist films can be read as products of contemporary risk society characterized by a widespread reflexivity towards the outcomes of the modernization process, a deep insecurity over class relations, and an ambivalence towards expert knowledge within late modernity. These themes are expressed in the films through techniques of inversion and defamiliarization that have the effect of representing a society fearful of its stability and with no clear vision of the way forward. K1 Antichrist K1 Apocalypse K1 Risk society K1 horror film K1 Inversion K1 Defamiliarization DO 10.3138/jrpc.24.2.217