Characteristics of Gothic Literature English III Mrs. Dunn-Reier When did it become popular? • Later 18th Century • Started with a “Gothic Revival” -- mid-1700’s • Visible in gardens • Seen in architecture (gargoyles) of the Middle Ages • 1740’s - Horace Walpole - Strawberry Hill estate near London • Published The Castle of Otranto: a Gothic Story 1764 http://www.puzzlehistory.com/gothgrdn.jpg Application to literature http://www.greatscotland.be/evenementen. htm • Any kind of romantic, scary novel • Came from Germany in the late 1700’s - early 1800’s • Popular among female writers • Became best Famous Gothic Writers • Ann Radcliffe - The Mysteries of Udolpho • Jane Austen -- Northanger Abbey (parody of Gothic novels) • Charlotte Bronte -- Jane Eyre • Emily Bronte -- Wuthering Heights • Shirley Jackson, Daphne du Maurier, Barbara Michaels, Anne Rice A classic • Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818) • Single most important product of this tradition • Themes relate to science, poetry, psychology, alienation, politics, education, family relationships, etc. • Tradition: 8-foot tall monster made of separate body pieces librarycommission.lib.wv.us/ WVLC%20BOOK/Frank... Influence felt elsewhere • Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Coleridge-- skeleton ship and the crew’s reaction • Christabel by Coleridge-atmosphere, setting, and fragmentary plot of seduction and witchery • Manfred by Byron -- initial scene • The Even of St. Agnes by Keats -- setting http://www.wilsonsalmanac.com/images2/ancient_m ariner4.jpg Famous Gothic Writers - cont’d. • Edgar Allen Poe • Steven King http://www.1001votes.com/vote/fond.php?mcat=24&lg =fr http://www.3boysproductions.com/MI FF-2002-Fri-Nite-Program.htm Characteristics • Set in Medieval times • Dark, mysterious, evil tone • Dark castles, palaces, chambers, haunted mansions • Isolated setting • All come together to emphasize the sense of evil http://www.encounterspri.com/Articles.ht m More characteristics • Presence of ghosts, spirits, vampires, and other supernatural entities • Mysterious disappearances and reappearances • Supernatural or paranormal occurrences http://www.penelopesweb.com/gargoyles.html Characteristics -- cont’d. • Religion, usually Christianity or at least spirituality, is confronted. • A gothic “double” is used in which a character who seems to be good is linked with another who is evil www.pagedepot.com/.../ GOTHIC%20CHAPBOOKSX.HTM More characteristics • • • • Blood, pain, death Cruelty Eroticism Characters with “aberrant psychological states” • Events are “uncanny, macabre, or melodramatically violent bordering between reality and unreality http://www.pantip.com/cafe/chalermthai/newmovi e/hauntedcastle/hc.html Purpose • To evoke “terror” versus “horror” in the reader because of situations bordering reality/unreality •Often used to teach a message • May lack a Medieval setting but will develop an atmosphere of gloom and terror Differentiating between the two • Horror •“An awful apprehension” •Described distinctly •Something grotesque •So appalling, unrealistic •Depends on physical characteristics • Terror •“A sickening realization” •Suggestive of what will happen •Depends on reader’s imagination •Sense of uncertainty •Creates an “intangible atmosphere of spiritual psychic dread” American Gothic • Important from the mid-18th Century on • Related to “Romantic Period” • Criticizes “national myth of newworld innocence by voicing the cultural contradictions that undermine the nation’s claim to purity and equality” - Teresa A. Goddu •Tells of historical horrors that make national identity http://photos1.blogger.com/img/154/1420/1024/american% 20gothic.jpg Southern Gothic http://www.madelinecarolgall ery.com/images/Southern%2 0Plantation.jpg • Customary setting because it’s the source of values not necessarily welcome in the rest of the country • Poe was the first Southern gothic writer • Common themes: race, alienation, sense of “otherness” Cyber gothic literature • Situations seem unrealistic during this time period but possible in the future • Dark setting • Nothing natural; all man-made • Characters’ bodies are often altered, making them less human-like • Based on knowledge and a “technologically enhanced future” http://darklands.ivorytower.net/index.php?module=ContentExpress&func=display& ceid=17&meid=-1 Your assignment • Work in groups of 4-5 • Take turns around the circle creating a “gothic” story - campfire style 3-5 mins. in length • Take notes and write down key plot points • Write down gothic elements included • Be prepared to share with the class next time we meet. http://www.illustrationweb.com/artist_pages/artist_image s/artist_4/the_pit_and_the_pendulum.jpg Sources of text • http://www.acsu.buffalo.edu/~mdward/essay 2.html • http://www.wwnorton.com/nael/romatic/topic _2/welcome.htm • And others
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