There is something monstrous about capital, something alive and creeping about it. Its been compared to a parasite, a vampire, a zombie-maker; one that transforms human lives into dead labour, and marshals all creative, free-thinking individuality into the long trudge that is work, money-making, aspiration. The philosopher Mark Fisher famously compared capital to the alien in John Carpenters The Thing: an infinitely plastic entity capable of metabolising and absorbing anything with which it comes into contact. For the latest book in its acclaimed horror series, Comma has invited ten authors to explore this emergent, monstrous property of capital through supernatural and surreal means. Thus, we see characters disappearing into algorithm-driven spending addictions, property development spreading like a virus across cityscapes leaving buildings empty and people homeless, and citizens so addicted to the news drug that promises everything is about to change that nothing does. We may think of capitalism as the ghost in the machine, driving things forwards. But what happens when we become the ghosts?
Genre: Horror
Genre: Horror