This section incorporates a listing of the chapters in edited collections that I have had published. These are in reverse date order, with the newest at the top.
“The Folk of Folk Horror” in Louis Bayman and Kevin Donnelly, eds. Folk Horror: Return of the British Repressed. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2022(?).
“Gothic Television”, Cambridge History of the Gothic, Volume Three: The Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries, 1896-Present, ed. Catherine Spooner and Dale Townshend, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021. pp.221-241.
“Ghosts and Television”, Scott Brewster and Luke Thurston (eds) A Companion to the Ghost Story (London: Routledge, 2017), pp.378-387
“Seasons, Family and Nation in American Horror Story“, Rebecca Janicker (ed) Reading American Horror Story: Essays on the Television Franchise (Jefferson: McFarland, 2017), pp.45-63
“Introduction”, with Rayna Denison and Rachel Mizsei-Ward, in Rayna Denison and Rachel Mizsei-Ward (eds.) Superheroes on World Screens (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2015), pp.3-16 –Nominated for the Eisner Award for Best Academic / Scholarly Work 2016
“Invaders, Launchpads and Hybrids: The Importance of Transmediality in British Science Fiction Film in the 1950s”, Sonja Fritzsche (ed.), The Liverpool Companion to World Science Fiction Film (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2014), pp.89-103 –translated for publication in China
“The Sound of Civilisation: Music in Terry Nation’s Survivors”, Kevin Donnelly and Philip Hayward (eds), Music in Science Fiction Television: Tuned to the Future (London: Routledge, 2013), pp.123-134
“Genre, Special Effects and Authorship in the Critical Reception of Science Fiction Film and Television during the 1950s”, with Mark Jancovich, in Elizabeth McCarthy and Bernice M. Murphy (eds), It Came from the 1950s: Popular Culture, Popular Anxieties, (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011), pp.90-107
“The BBC versus Science Fiction! The collision of transnational genre and national identity in British television in the early 1950s”, in James Leggott and Tobias Hochscherf (eds) British Science Fiction Film and Television: Critical Essays (London: McFarland, 2011), pp.40-49
“Film and Television – the 1950s”, with Mark Jancovich, in Mark Bould, Andrew M.Butler, Adam Roberts and Sherryl Vint (eds) The Routledge Companion to Science Fiction (London: Routledge, 2009) pp.71-79