The term refers to an obsession with the human body that "suggests a connection between horror and pornography", often relating to hardcore horror films. Carnography is considered taboo and a disreputable genre.[6]
It has been described as "nastily impure work",[7]
"splatter-obsessed hard core horror",[8]
and "watching flesh fly".[1][4]
Carnographic horror films have a "superfluous plot" in which characters are "initiated, only to be discarded", and the gore seems to be the only reason the film exists.[9]
Pornography and carnography share the feature of close, intimate physical contact, whether it be to caress or to attack.[10]
^ abSkow, John (1972-05-29). "Carnography". Time magazine. Archived from the original on October 16, 2007. Retrieved 2009-04-15. I am sick of carnography, of sitting safe and watching meat fly. On the screen or on the page. But don't Moby-Dick and Hamlet also end bloodily? And isn't the reader/viewer always a voyeur?
^"Word Spy — carnography". Wordspy. Archived from the original on 2006-11-10. Retrieved 2009-04-15. Writings, films, images, or other materials that contain scenes of carnage or other types of violence. [Blend of carnage and pornography.] Also: carno
^ abWinter, Douglas E. (1985). Faces of fear: encounters with the creators of modern horror. Berkley Books. p. 82. ISBN0-425-07670-9. Retrieved 2009-04-15. When First Blood was published in 1972, Time devoted its lead book review to accusing Morrell of inventing a new form of fiction – "carnography," the violent equivalent of pornography.
^Rahner, Mark (2008-01-25). "Rambo's back; body parts fly". Seattle Times. Archived from the original on 2009-04-18. Retrieved 2009-04-15. Guts fly, limbs get blown off, a throat is torn out, women are raped, children are killed, scores of people are cut to ribbons with machine-gun fire, or blown up — a book I have describes Rambo as "carnography," and this may be the hardest-core mainstream carnography to date.
^Pinedo, Isabel Cristina (1997). Recreational terror: women and the pleasures of horror film viewing. SUNY Press. p. 61. ISBN0-7914-3441-9. Retrieved 2009-04-15. The link between hard-core pornography and hard-core horror or the gore film is captured in the term "carnography" (Gehr 1990, 58), which uses the carnality of both genres as a bridge.
^Harvey, Karen (2004). Reading sex in the eighteenth century. Cambridge University Press. p. 21. ISBN0-521-82235-1. Retrieved 2009-04-15. ... Alan Bold's distinction between 'good erotica' and 'carnography' (the latter meaning 'nastily impure work' written by 'male chauvinists' and imbued with 'the sense of a desire to masticate flesh')...
^Browning, Mark (2007). David Cronenberg: author or film-maker?. Intellect Books. p. 58. ISBN978-1-84150-173-4. Retrieved 2009-04-15. Ian Conrich underlines the 'relationship between the opened bodies of pornography and splatter-obsessed hard core horror' that Richard Gehr calls 'carnography'...
^Burtchaell, James Tunstead (1998). Philemon's problem: a theology of grace. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 182. ISBN0-8028-4549-5. Retrieved 2009-04-15. One obvious shared feature [between pornography and carnography] is that both passions involve physical contact...