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{{Short description|Romance, horror and death literary genre}} | |||
{{Multiple issues|original research = October 2011|essay = October 2011|refimprove = October 2011|cleanup = October 2011}} | |||
{{Redirect|Gothic literature|text=It may also refer to texts in the extinct ]. For fiction associated with the goth scene, see {{Section link|Goth subculture|Books and magazines}}}} | |||
{{Use British English|date=May 2020}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2020}} | |||
]'s '']'' (1818) has come to define Gothic fiction in the Romantic period. Frontispiece to 1831 edition shown.]] | |||
'''Gothic fiction''', sometimes called '''Gothic horror''' (primarily in the 20th century), is a loose literary ] of ] and ]. The name refers to ] of the European ], which was characteristic of the settings of early Gothic novels. | |||
The first work to call itself Gothic was ]'s 1764 novel '']'', later subtitled "A Gothic Story". Subsequent 18th-century contributors included ], ], ], and ]. The Gothic influence continued into the early 19th century; works by the ], like ] and ], and novelists such as ], ], ] and ] frequently drew upon gothic motifs in their works. | |||
], an English villa in the "]" style, built by seminal Gothic writer Horace Walpole]] | |||
The early ] continued the use of gothic aesthetic in novels by ] and the ], as well as works by the American writers ] and ]. Later well-known works were '']'' by ], ] '']'' and ]'s '']''. 20th-century contributors include ], ], ], ], and ]. | |||
'''Gothic fiction,''' sometimes referred to as '''Gothic horror,''' is a genre or mode of literature that combines elements of both horror and romance. Gothicism's origin is attributed to English author ], with his 1764 novel '']'', subtitled "A Gothic Story". The effect of Gothic fiction feeds on a pleasing sort of terror, an extension of ] literary pleasures that were relatively new at the time of Walpole's novel. Melodrama and parody (including self-parody) were other long-standing features of the Gothic initiated by Walpole. | |||
== |
==Characteristics== | ||
]'s '']'' (1819)]] | |||
===First Gothic romances=== | |||
Gothic fiction is characterized by an environment of fear, the threat of ] events, and the intrusion of the past upon the present.<ref name="Birch">{{Cite encyclopedia |year=2009 |title=Gothic fiction |encyclopedia=The Oxford Companion to English Literature |publisher=Oxford University Press |editor-last=Birch |editor-first=Dinah |edition=7th |isbn=9780191735066}}</ref><ref name="Hogle">{{Cite book |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/9780511999185/type/book |title=The Cambridge Companion to Gothic Fiction |date=2002-08-29 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-79124-3 |editor-last=Hogle |editor-first=Jerrold E. |edition=1 |pages=1–20 |chapter=Introduction |series=Cambridge Companions to Literature |doi=10.1017/ccol0521791243}}</ref> The setting typically includes physical reminders of the past, especially through ruined buildings which stand as proof of a previously thriving world which is decaying in the present.<ref name="De Vore setting">{{Cite web |last=De Vore |first=David |title=The Gothic Novel |url=http://cai.ucdavis.edu/waters-sites/gothicnovel/155breport.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110313142647/http://cai.ucdavis.edu/waters-sites/gothicnovel/155breport.html |archive-date=2011-03-13|quote="The setting is greatly influential in Gothic novels. It not only evokes the atmosphere of horror and dread, but also portrays the deterioration of its world. The decaying, ruined scenery implies that at one time there was a thriving world. At one time the abbey, castle, or landscape was something treasured and appreciated. Now, all that lasts is the decaying shell of a once thriving dwelling."}}</ref> Characteristic settings in the 18th and 19th centuries include castles, religious buildings such as ] and ]s, and ]s. The atmosphere is typically ], and common plot elements include vengeful persecution, imprisonment, and murder.<ref name="Birch" /> The depiction of horrible events in Gothic fiction often serves as a metaphorical expression of psychological or social conflicts.<ref name="Hogle" /> The form of a Gothic story is usually discontinuous and convoluted, often incorporating tales within tales, changing narrators, and framing devices such as discovered manuscripts or interpolated histories.<ref name="Kosofsky Sedgwick">{{Cite web|author=Kosofsky Sedgwick, Eve|author-link=Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick|url=https://readingemilydickinson.weebly.com/uploads/2/9/1/3/29138015/coherence_of_gothic_conventions_with_annotations.pdf|title=The Coherence of Gothic Conventions|publisher=Methuen |date=1980|access-date=July 25, 2022}}</ref> Other characteristics, regardless of relevance to the main plot, can include sleeplike and deathlike states, ]s, ], unnatural echoes or silences, the discovery of obscured family ties, unintelligible writings, nocturnal landscapes, remote locations,<ref name=":0">{{Cite book |title=The Sherlock Holmes Book |publisher=] |year=2015 |isbn=978-1-4654-3849-2 |editor-last=Davies |editor-first=David Stuart |editor-link=David Stuart Davies |edition=First American |location=New York |pages=99–100 |editor-last2=Forshaw |editor-first2=Barry |editor-link2=Barry Forshaw}}</ref> and dreams.<ref name="Kosofsky Sedgwick" /> Especially in the late 19th century, Gothic fiction often involved ]s and ], ]s, and other kinds of evil ].<ref name=":0" /> | |||
]'' (1764) is usually regarded as the first Gothic novel.]] | |||
====The Castle of Otranto==== | |||
]'s '']'' (1764) is often regarded as the first true Gothic romance, was obsessed with medieval Gothic architecture, and built his own house, ], in that form, sparking a fashion for ] <ref>Punter (2004) p177</ref> | |||
Gothic fiction often moves between "]" and "]" or "]".<ref name="Hogle" />{{Clarify|date=July 2023|reason=Clarify what this means, and how it is relevant}} | |||
His declared aim was to combine elements of the medieval romance, which he deemed too fanciful, and the modern novel, which he considered to be too confined to strict realism <ref>Punter (2004) p178</ref> The basic plot created many other Gothic staples, including a threatening mystery and an ancestral curse, as well as countless trappings such as hidden passages and oft-fainting heroines. The first edition was published disguised as an actual medieval romance from Italy discovered and republished by a fictitious translator. When Walpole admitted to his authorship in the second edition, its originally favourable reception by literary reviewers changed into rejection. The romance, usually held in contempt by the educated as a tawdry and debased kind of writing, had only recently been made respectable by the works of Richardson and Fielding <ref>Fuchs (2004) p106</ref>. A romance with superstitious elements, and moreover void of didactical intention, was considered a setback and not acceptable as a modern production. Walpole's forgery, together with the blend of history and fiction that was contravening the principles of the ], brought about the Gothic novel's association with fake documentation. | |||
=== |
===Role of architecture=== | ||
], southwest London, an English villa in the "]" style, built by Gothic writer ]]] | |||
], best known for her work '']'' (1778), set out to take Walpole's plot and adapt it to the demands of the time by balancing fantastic elements with 18th century realism. The question now arose whether supernatural events that were not as evidently absurd as Walpole's would not lead the simpler minds to believe them possible. | |||
] folly in ], ], built as a ruin in 1741, designed by ]<ref>{{cite book|last1=Luckhurst|first1=Roger|title=GOTHIC An Illustrated History|date=2021|publisher=Thames & Hudson|isbn=978-0-500-25251-2|page=25|url=|language=en}}</ref>]] | |||
Gothic literature is strongly associated with the ] of the same era. English Gothic writers often associated medieval buildings with what they saw as a dark and terrifying period, marked by harsh laws enforced by ] and with mysterious, fantastic, and ] ]. Similar to the Gothic Revivalists' rejection of the clarity and ] of the ] style of the ] Establishment, the literary Gothic embodies an appreciation of the joys of extreme emotion, the thrills of fearfulness and awe inherent in the ], and a quest for atmosphere. Gothic ruins invoke multiple linked emotions by representing inevitable ] and the collapse of human creations – hence the urge to add fake ruins as eyecatchers in English landscape parks. | |||
Placing a story in a Gothic building serves several purposes. It inspires feelings of awe, implies that the story is set in the past, gives an impression of ] or dissociation from the rest of the world, and conveys religious associations. Setting the novel in a Gothic castle was meant to imply a story set in the past and shrouded in darkness. The architecture often served as a mirror for the characters and events of the story.<ref>Bayer-Berenbaum, L. 1982. ''The Gothic Imagination: Expansion in Gothic Literature and Art''. Rutherford: ].</ref> The buildings in ''The Castle of Otranto'', for example, are riddled with ] that characters use to move back and forth in secret. This movement mirrors the secrets surrounding Manfred's possession of the castle and how it came into his family.<ref>Walpole, H. 1764 (1968). ''The Castle of Otranto''. Reprinted in ''Three Gothic Novels''. London: Penguin Press.</ref> | |||
====Ann Radcliffe==== | |||
] developed the technique of the ''explained supernatural''{{Citation needed|date=October 2011}}, in which every seemingly supernatural intrusion is eventually traced back to natural causes. Radcliffe made the Gothic novel socially acceptable. Her success attracted many imitators, mostly of low quality, which soon led to a general perception of the genre as inferior, formulaic, and stereotypical. Among other elements, Ann Radcliffe also introduced the brooding figure of the Gothic villain, which developed into the ]. Radcliffe's novels, above all '']'' (1794), were best-sellers, although along with all novels they were looked down upon by well-educated people as sensationalist women's entertainment, despite some men's enjoyment of them. | |||
===The Female Gothic=== | |||
Radcliffe also provided an aesthetic for the genre in an influential article "On the Supernatural in Poetry"<ref>'']'' 7, 1826, pp 145–52</ref>, examining the distinction and correlation between horror and terror in Gothic fiction <ref>Wright (2007) pp35-56</ref> | |||
From the castles, ], forests, and hidden passages of the Gothic novel genre emerged female Gothic. Guided by the works of authors such as ], ], and ], the female Gothic allowed women's societal and sexual desires to be introduced. In many respects, the novel's intended reader of the time was the woman who, even as she enjoyed such novels, felt she had to " down her book with affected indifference, or momentary shame,"<ref name="Austen">"Austen's ''Northanger Abbey''", Second Edition, Broadview, 2002.</ref> according to ]. The Gothic novel shaped its form for woman readers to "turn to Gothic romances to find support for their own mixed feelings."<ref name="Ronald">Ronald, Ann, "Terror Gothic: Nightmare and Dream in Ann Radcliffe and Charlotte Bronte", in Juliann E. Fleenor (ed.) , Montreal: Eden Press Inc., 1983, pp. 176–186.</ref> | |||
Female Gothic narratives focus on such topics as a persecuted heroine fleeing from a villainous father and searching for an absent mother. At the same time, male writers tend towards the masculine transgression of social ]. The emergence of the ] gave women writers something to write about besides the common marriage plot, allowing them to present a more radical critique of male power, violence, and predatory sexuality.<ref name="Smith, Andrew 2004, pp. 1–7">Smith, Andrew, and Diana Wallace, "The Female Gothic: Then and Now." ''Gothic Studies'', 25 August 2004, pp. 1–7.</ref> Authors such as ] and ] however, present a counter to the naive and persecuted heroines usually featured in female Gothic of the time, and instead feature more sexually assertive heroines in their works.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://reactormag.com/the-real-life-heroines-of-the-early-gothic/| title=The Real Life Heroines of the Early Gothic | |||
===Developments in continental Europe, and ''The Monk''=== | |||
| date=May 14, 2021|last=Hirst|first=Sam| website=]| access-date=June 22, 2024}}</ref> | |||
Contemporaneously to English Gothic, parallel Romantic literary movements developed in continental Europe: the ''roman noir'' ("black novel") in France, by such writers as ], ], Baculard d'Arnaud, and Stéphanie Félicité Ducrest de St-Albin, Madame de Genlis and the ''Schauerroman'' ("shudder novel") in Germany by such writers as ], author of '']'' (1789) and ], author of ''Das Petermännchen'' (1791/92). These works were often more horrific and violent than the English Gothic novel. | |||
When the female Gothic coincides with the explained ], the natural cause of terror is not the supernatural, but female disability and societal horrors: ], ], and the threatening control of a male antagonist. Female Gothic novels also address women's discontent with ] society, their difficult and unsatisfying maternal position, and their role within that society. Women's fears of entrapment in the domestic, their bodies, marriage, childbirth, or ] commonly appear in the genre. | |||
The fruit of this harvest of continental horrors was ] lurid tale of monastic debauchery, black magic, and diabolism '']'' (1796). Though Lewis' novel could be read as a sly, tongue-in-cheek spoof of the emerging genre, self-parody was a constituent part of the Gothic from the time of the genre's inception with Walpole's ''Otranto''. | |||
After the characteristic Gothic '']''-like plot sequence, female Gothic allowed readers to grow from "adolescence to maturity"<ref name="Nichols">Nichols, Nina da Vinci, "Place and Eros in Radcliffe, Lewis and Bronte", in Juliann E. Fleenor (ed.), , Montreal: Eden Press Inc., 1983, pp. 187–206.</ref> in the face of the realized impossibilities of the supernatural. As protagonists such as Adeline in '']'' learn that their superstitious fantasies and terrors are replaced by natural cause and reasonable doubt, the reader may grasp the heroine's true position: "The heroine possesses the romantic temperament that perceives strangeness where others see none. Her sensibility, therefore, prevents her from knowing that her true plight is her condition, the disability of being female."<ref name="Nichols" /> | |||
Lewis' tale appalled some contemporary readers; however his portrayal of depraved monks, sadistic inquisitors and spectral nuns, and his scurrilous view of the Catholic Church was an important development in the genre and influenced established terror-writer Anne Radcliffe in her last novel '']'' (1797). In this book the hapless protagonists are ensnared in a web of deceit by a malignant monk called Schedoni and eventually dragged before the tribunals of the ] in Rome, leading one contemporary to remark that if Radcliffe wished to transcend the horror of these scenes she would have to visit hell itself. <ref>Birkhead (1921).</ref> | |||
==History== | |||
The ] used a Gothic framework for some of his fiction, notably '']'' and ''Eugenie de Franval'', though the marquis himself never thought of his work as such. Sade critiqued the genre in the preface of his ''Reflections on the novel'' (1800) which is widely accepted today, stating that the Gothic is "the inevitable product of the revolutionary shock with which the whole of Europe resounded". This correlation between the ] ] and the "terrorist school" of writing represented by Radcliffe and Lewis was noted by contemporary critics of the genre <ref>Wright (2007) pp57-73</ref> Sade considered ''The Monk'' to be superior to the work of Ann Radcliffe. | |||
===Precursors=== | |||
{{Quote box|align=right|quote=<poem> | |||
'Tis now the very witching time of night, | |||
When churchyards yawn, and hell itself breathes out | |||
Contagion to this world. Now could I drink hot blood, | |||
And do such bitter business as the day | |||
Would quake to look on. | |||
</poem> | |||
|source=— Lines from Shakespeare's '']''}} | |||
The components that would eventually combine into Gothic literature had a rich history by the time Walpole presented a fictitious medieval manuscript in ''The Castle of Otranto'' in 1764. | |||
The plays of ], in particular, were a crucial reference point for early Gothic writers, in both an effort to bring credibility to their works, and to legitimize the emerging genre as serious literature to the public.<ref>{{Cite thesis|author=L. Wiley, Jennifer|url=https://repository.arizona.edu/bitstream/handle/10150/594386/azu_etd_14308_sip1_m.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|title=Shakespeare's Influence on the English Gothic, 1791–1834: The Conflicts of Ideologies |type=PhD dissertation |publisher=University of Arizona |date=2015 |access-date=May 4, 2022 |hdl=10150/594386}}</ref> Tragedies such as '']'', '']'', '']'', ''],'' and '']'', with plots revolving around the supernatural, revenge, murder, ghosts, ], and ]s, written in dramatic pathos, and set in medieval castles, were a huge influence upon early Gothic authors, who frequently quote, and make allusions to Shakespeare's works.<ref>{{Cite thesis |author=Hewitt, Natalie A.|url=https://scholarship.claremont.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=&httpsredir=1&article=1080&context=cgu_etd/|title=Something old and dark has got its way": Shakespeare's Influence in the Gothic Literary Tradition |type=PhD dissertation |publisher=Claremont Graduate University |date=2013|access-date=April 29, 2022 |doi=10.5642/cguetd/77 |doi-access=free }}</ref> | |||
Other notable writers in the continental tradition include ] (1761–1815) and ] (1776–1822). | |||
]'s '']'' (1667) was also very influential among Gothic writers, who were especially drawn to the tragic ] character ], who became a model for many charismatic Gothic villains and ]. Milton's "version of the myth of the fall and redemption, creation and decreation, is, as '']'' again reveals, an important model for Gothic plots."<ref>{{Cite thesis|author=Percival, Robert |url=https://ir.canterbury.ac.nz/bitstream/handle/10092/11870/Percival_thesis.pdf?sequence=1|title=From the Sublime to the Numinous: A Study of Gothic Qualities in the Poetry and Drama of Shelley's Italian Period |type=MA thesis |publisher=University of Canterbury |date=2013|access-date=April 29, 2022 |hdl=10092/11870 |doi=10.26021/4865 }}</ref> | |||
], who had a considerable influence on Walpole, was the first significant poet of the 18th century to write a poem in an authentic Gothic manner.<ref>{{Cite thesis|author=Saraoorian, Vahe |url=https://etd.ohiolink.edu/apexprod/rws_etd/send_file/send?accession=bgsu1554464085299421&disposition=inline |title=The Way To Otranto: Gothic Elements In Eighteenth-Century English Poetry |type=PhD dissertation |publisher=Bowling Green State University |date=1970 |access-date=May 4, 2022}}</ref> '']'' (1717), a tale of star-crossed lovers, one doomed to a life of seclusion in a convent, and the other in a monastery, abounds in gloomy imagery, religious terror, and suppressed passion. The influence of Pope's poem is found throughout 18th-century Gothic literature, including the novels of Walpole, Radcliffe, and Lewis.<ref>{{Cite thesis |author=Virginia Stoops, Marion|url=https://etd.ohiolink.edu/apexprod/rws_etd/send_file/send?accession=osu1166460676&disposition=inline|title=Gothic Elements in Pope's Eloisa to Abelard |type=MA thesis |publisher=Ohio State University |date=1973|access-date=May 4, 2022}}</ref> | |||
===The Romantics=== | |||
]'s '']'' (1818) has come to define Gothic fiction in the Romantic period. Frontispiece to 1831 edition shown.]] | |||
Gothic literature is often described with words such as "wonder" and "terror."<ref name="Terror and Wonder">{{Cite web |url=http://www.bl.uk/events/terror-and-wonder--the-gothic-imagination |title=Terror and Wonder the Gothic Imagination |website=The British Library |publisher=British Library|access-date=26 March 2016}}</ref> This sense of wonder and terror that provides the ] so important to the Gothic—which, except for when it is parodied, even for all its occasional ], is typically played straight, in a self-serious manner—requires the imagination of the reader to be willing to accept the idea that there might be something "beyond that which is immediately in front of us." The mysterious imagination necessary for Gothic literature to have gained any traction had been growing for some time before the advent of the Gothic. The need for this came as the known world was becoming more explored, reducing the geographical mysteries of the world. The edges of the map were filling in, and no dragons were to be found. The human mind required a replacement.<ref name="Early and Pre-Gothic Literary Conventions">{{Cite web |url=http://www.spookyscarysociety.com/2015/10/31/october-2015-literary-meeting-early-and-pre-gothic-literary-conventions-examples/ |title=Early and Pre-Gothic Literary Conventions & Examples |date=31 October 2015 |website=Spooky Scary Skeletons Literary and Horror Society |publisher=Spooky Scary Society |access-date=26 March 2016}}</ref> Clive Bloom theorizes that this void in the collective imagination was critical in developing the cultural possibility for the rise of the Gothic tradition.<ref name="Gothic Histories">{{cite book|last1=Bloom|first1=Clive|title=Gothic Histories: The Taste for Terror, 1764 to Present|date=2010|publisher=Continuum International Publishing Group|location=London|page=2}}</ref> | |||
Further contributions to the Gothic genre were provided in the work of the Romantic poets. Prominent examples include ]'s '']'' and '']'' and ] '']'' (1819) and '']'' (1820) which feature mysteriously fey ladies (Skarda and Jaffe 1981: 33-5, 132-3). In the latter poem the names of the characters, the dream visions and the macabre physical details are influenced by the novels of premiere Gothicist Anne Radcliffe (Skarda and Jaffe 1981: 132-3). ]'s first published work was the Gothic novel '']'' (1810), about an outlaw obsessed with revenge against his father and half-brother. Shelley published a second Gothic novel in 1811, '']'', about an alchemist who seeks to impart the secret of immortality. | |||
The setting of most early Gothic works was medieval, but this was a common theme long before Walpole. In Britain especially, there was a desire to reclaim a shared past. This obsession frequently led to extravagant architectural displays, such as ], and sometimes mock tournaments were held. It was not merely in literature that a medieval revival made itself felt, and this, too, contributed to a culture ready to accept a perceived medieval work in 1764.<ref name="Early and Pre-Gothic Literary Conventions" /> | |||
The poetry, romantic adventures and character of ], characterised by his spurned lover ] as 'mad, bad and dangerous to know' were another inspiration for the Gothic, providing the archetype of the ]. Byron features, under the codename of ']', in Lady Caroline's own Gothic novel: '']'' (1816). | |||
The Gothic often uses scenery of decay, death, and morbidity to achieve its effects (especially in the Italian Horror school of Gothic). However, Gothic literature was not the origin of this tradition; it was far older. The corpses, skeletons, and churchyards so commonly associated with early Gothic works were popularized by the ]. They were also present in novels such as ]'s '']'', which contains comical scenes of plague carts and piles of corpses. Even earlier, poets like ] evoked a dreary and sorrowful mood in such poems as ].<ref name="Early and Pre-Gothic Literary Conventions" /> | |||
Byron was also the host of the celebrated ghost-story competition involving himself, ], ], and ] at the Villa Diodati on the banks of ] in the summer of 1816. This occasion was productive of both Mary Shelley's '']'' (1818) and Polidori's '']'' (1819). This latter story revives Lamb's Byronic 'Lord Ruthven', but this time as a vampire. ''The Vampyre'' has been accounted by cultural critic Christopher Frayling as one of the most influential works of fiction ever written and spawned a craze for ] and theatre (and latterly film) which has not ceased to this day. Mary Shelley's novel, though clearly influenced by the Gothic tradition, is often considered the first ] novel, despite the omission in the novel of any scientific explanation of the monster's animation and the focus instead on the moral issues and consequences of such a creation. | |||
All aspects of pre-Gothic literature occur to some degree in the Gothic, but even taken together, they still fall short of true Gothic.<ref name="Early and Pre-Gothic Literary Conventions" /> What needed to be added was an aesthetic to tie the elements together. Bloom notes that this aesthetic must take the form of a theoretical or philosophical core, which is necessary to "sav the best tales from becoming mere anecdote or incoherent sensationalism."<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Bloom |first1=Clive |title=Gothic Histories: The Taste for Terror, 1764 to Present |date=2010 |publisher=Continuum International Publishing Group |location=London |page=8}}</ref> In this case, the aesthetic needed to be emotional, and was finally provided by ]'s 1757 work, '']'', which "finally codif the gothic emotional experience."<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.spookyscarysociety.com/2015/10/31/october-2015-literary-meeting-early-and-pre-gothic-literary-conventions-examples/ |title=Early and Pre-Gothic Literary Conventions & Examples |date=31 October 2016 |website=Spooky Scary Skeletons Literary and Horror Society |publisher=Spooky Scary Society |access-date=26 March 2016}}</ref> Specifically, Burke's thoughts on the Sublime, Terror, and Obscurity were most applicable. These sections can be summarized thus: the Sublime is that which is or produces the "strongest emotion which the mind is capable of feeling"; Terror most often evoked the Sublime; and to cause Terror, we need some amount of Obscurity – we can't know everything about that which is inducing Terror – or else "a great deal of the apprehension vanishes"; Obscurity is necessary to experience the Terror of the unknown.<ref name="Early and Pre-Gothic Literary Conventions" /> Bloom asserts that Burke's descriptive vocabulary was essential to the Romantic works that eventually informed the Gothic. | |||
A late example of traditional Gothic is '']'' (1820) by ] which combines themes of Anti-Catholicism with an outcast ] (Varma 1986). | |||
The birth of Gothic literature was thought to have been influenced by political upheaval. Researchers linked its birth with the ], culminating in the ] which was more recent to the first Gothic novel (1764). The collective political memory and any deep cultural fears associated with it likely contributed to early Gothic villains as literary representatives of defeated ] barons or ] "rising" from their political graves in the pages of early Gothic novels to terrorize the ] reader of late eighteenth-century England.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Radcliffe |first1=Ann |title=The Castles of Athlin and Dunbayne |date=1995 |publisher=Oxford UP |location=Oxford |isbn=0192823574 |pages=vii–xxiv}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last1=Alexandre-Garner |first1=Corinne |title=Borderlines and Borderlands:Confluences XXIV |date=2004 |publisher=] X-Nanterre |location=Paris |isbn=2907335278 |pages=205–216}}</ref><ref>{{Cite thesis |last1=Cairney |first1=Christopher |title=The Villain Character in the Puritan World |date=1995 |type=PhD dissertation |publisher=] |location=Columbia |url=http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&res_dat=xri:pqdiss&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&rft_dat=xri:pqdiss:9705216 |access-date=20 November 2017 |id={{ProQuest|2152179598}} }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Cairney |first1=Chris |title=Intertextuality and Intratextuality; Does Mary Shelley 'Sit Heavily Behind' Conrad's Heart of Darkness? |journal=Culture in Focus |date=2018 |volume=1 |issue=1 |page=92 |url=https://www.mga.edu/culture-in-focus/docs/2018/Vol1-Issue1.pdf |access-date=30 April 2018 |archive-date=23 July 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180723212416/https://www.mga.edu/culture-in-focus/docs/2018/Vol1-Issue1.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
===Victorian Gothic=== | |||
] | |||
By the Victorian era Gothic had ceased to be the dominant genre and was dismissed by most critics (in fact the form's popularity as an established genre had already begun to erode with the success of the historical romance popularised by Sir ]). However, in many ways, it was now entering its most creative phase. Recently readers and critics have begun to reconsider a number of previously overlooked Penny Blood or ] serial fictions by such authors as ] who wrote a trilogy of Gothic horror novels: ''Faust'' (1846), ''Wagner the Wehr-wolf'' (1847) and ''The Necromancer'' (1857) <ref>Baddeley (2002) pp143-4)</ref>. Reynolds was also responsible for '']'' which has been accorded an important place in the development of the urban as a particularly Victorian Gothic setting, an area within which interesting links can be made with established readings of the work of Dickens and others. Another famous penny dreadful of this era was the anonymously authored '']'' (1847). The formal relationship between these fictions, serialised for predominantly working class audiences, and the roughly contemporaneous sensation fictions serialised in middle class periodicals is also an area worthy of inquiry. | |||
===Eighteenth-century Gothic novels=== | |||
Influential critics, above all ], far from denouncing mediaeval obscurantism, praised the imagination and fantasy exemplified by its Gothic architecture, influencing the ]. | |||
{{main|Eighteenth-century Gothic novel}} | |||
]'' (1764) is regarded as the first Gothic novel. The aesthetics of the book have shaped modern-day gothic books, films, art, music and the goth subculture.<ref name="Gothic genre">. ''BBC News''. 13 December 2014. Retrieved 9 July 2017.</ref>]] | |||
The first work to call itself "Gothic" was ]'s '']'' (1764).<ref name="Birch"/> The first edition presented the story as a translation of a sixteenth-century manuscript and was widely popular.<ref name="Gothic genre"/> Walpole, in the second edition, revealed himself as the author which adding the subtitle "A Gothic Story." The revelation prompted a backlash from readers, who considered it inappropriate for a modern author to write a supernatural story in a rational age.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Clery |first=E. J. |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/776946868 |title=The Rise of Supernatural Fiction, 1762–1800 |date=1995 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-511-51899-7 |location=Cambridge |oclc=776946868}}</ref> Initiating a literary genre, Walpole's Gothic tale inspired many contemporary imitators, including ]'s '']'' (1778), with Reeve writing in the preface: "This Story is the literary offspring of ''The Castle of Otranto''".<ref name="Gothic genre"/> Like Reeve, the 1780s saw more writers attempting his combination of supernatural plots with emotionally realistic characters. Examples include ]'s ''The Recess'' (1783–5) and ]'s '']'' (1786).<ref name="Sucur" /> | |||
]'s '']'' (1794), a bestselling novel that was critical in setting off the Gothic craze of the 1790s]] | |||
An important and innovative reinterpreter of the Gothic in this period was ]. Poe focused less on the traditional elements of gothic stories and more on the psychology of his characters as they often descended into madness. Poe's critics complained about his "German" tales, to which be replied, 'that terror is not of Germany, but of the soul'. Poe, a critic himself, believed that terror was a legitimate literary subject. His story "]" (1839) explores these 'terrors of the soul' whilst revisiting classic Gothic tropes of aristocratic decay, death, and madness <ref>(Skarda and Jaffe (1981) pp181-2</ref>. The legendary villainy of the ], previously explored by Gothicists Radcliffe, Lewis, and Maturin, is revisited in "]" (1842). The influence of ] is also detectable in Poe's "]" (1842), including an honorary mention of her name in the text of the story. | |||
At the height of the Gothic novel's popularity in the 1790s, the genre was almost synonymous with ], whose works were highly anticipated and widely imitated. '']'' (1791) and '']'' (1794) were particularly popular.<ref name="Sucur">{{Cite encyclopedia|title=Gothic fiction|encyclopedia=The Literary Encyclopedia.|last=Sucur|first=Slobodan|date=2007-05-06|issn=1747-678X}}</ref> In an essay on Radcliffe, ] writes of the popularity of ''Udolpho'' at the time, "The very name was fascinating, and the public, who rushed upon it with all the eagerness of curiosity, rose from it with unsated appetite. When a family was numerous, the volumes flew, and were sometimes torn from hand to hand."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://archive.org/details/livesnovelists01scotgoog/page/n5/mode/2up |title=Lives of the Novelists |last=Scott |first=Walter |publisher=Carey & Lea|page=195| date=1825}}</ref> Radcliffe's novels were often seen as the feminine and rational opposite of a more violently horrifying male Gothic associated with ]. Radcliffe's final novel, ] (1797), responded to Lewis's '']'' (1796).<ref name="Hogle"/> Radcliffe and Lewis have been called "the two most significant Gothic novelists of the 1790s."<ref>{{Cite web|author=Miles, Robert|url=https://archive.org/details/a_companion_to_the_gothic/page/n49/mode/2up|title= | |||
A Companion to the Gothic |date=2000|page=49|isbn=978-0-63123-199-8}}</ref> | |||
] notice in London from October 1795 listing new publications, including many Gothic titles.]] | |||
The influence of Byronic Romanticism evident in Poe is also apparent in the work of the Brontë sisters. ]'s '']'' (1847) transports the Gothic to the forbidding Yorkshire Moors and features ghostly apparitions and a Byronic hero in the person of the demonic Heathcliff whilst ]'s '']'' (1847) adds '']'' (] and ] 1979) to the cast of Gothic fiction. The Brontës' fiction is seen by some feminist critics as prime examples of Female Gothic, exploring woman's entrapment within domestic space and subjection to patriarchal authority and the transgressive and dangerous attempts to subvert and escape such restriction. Charlotte's Jane Eyre and Emily's Cathy are both examples of female protagonists in such a role <ref>Jackson (1981) pp123-29)</ref>. ]'s Gothic potboiler, '']'' (written in 1866, but published in 1995) is also an interesting specimen of this subgenre. | |||
The popularity and influence of ''The Mysteries of Udolpho'' and ''The Monk'' saw the rise of shorter and cheaper versions of Gothic literature in the forms of ] and ], which in many cases were plagiarized and abridgments of well known Gothic novels.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Thomas|first=Susan |url=https://library.unimelb.edu.au/asc/whats-on/exhibitions/dark-imaginings/gothicresearch/gothic-bluebooks-the-popular-thirst-for-fear-and-dread |title=Gothic bluebooks: The popular thirst for fear and dread|publisher=]}}</ref> ''The Monk'' in particular, with its immoral and sensational content, saw many plagiarized copies, and was notably drawn from in the cheaper pamphlets.<ref>{{Cite book |last=J. Potter|first=Franz J. |url=https://thedarkartsjournal.wordpress.com/2021/05/14/review-gothic-chapbooks/ |title=Gothic Chapbooks, Bluebooks and Shilling Shockers, 1797–1830 |date=2021 |publisher=University of Wales Press |isbn=978-1-78683-670-0}}</ref> | |||
Other notable Gothic novels of the 1790s include ]'s '']'' (1794), ]'s '']'' (1798), and ]'s ] (1798), as well as large numbers of anonymous works published by the ] established by ] at ], London in 1790.<ref name="Sucur" /> In continental Europe, Romantic literary movements led to related Gothic genres such as the German ''Schauerroman'' and the French R''oman noir''.<ref>{{Citation |last=Hale |first=Terry |title=French and German Gothic: the beginnings |date=2002 |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/cambridge-companion-to-gothic-fiction/french-and-german-gothic/D2C9BAEC304DC0E27775DF1CE36B9DA3 |work=The Cambridge Companion to Gothic Fiction |pages=63–84 |editor-last=Hogle |editor-first=Jerrold E. |series=Cambridge Companions to Literature |place=Cambridge |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-79124-3 |access-date=2020-09-02}}</ref><ref>{{Cite thesis |last=Seeger |first=Andrew Philip |date=2004 |title=Crosscurrents between the English Gothic novel and the German Schauerroman |type=PhD dissertation |publisher=University of Nebraska–Lincoln |url=https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/dissertations/AAI3131562 |id={{ProQuest|305161832}} |pages=1–208}}</ref> Eighteenth-century Gothic novels were typically set in a distant past and (for English novels) a distant European country, but without specific dates or historical figures that characterized the later development of historical fiction.<ref name="Richter">{{Cite book|last=Richter|first=David H.|title=The Oxford Handbook of the Eighteenth-Century Novel |chapter-url=https://oxfordhandbooks.com/view/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199566747.001.0001/oxfordhb-9780199566747-e-021|chapter=The Gothic Novel and the Lingering Appeal of Romance|date=2016-07-28|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-956674-7|editor-last=Downie|editor-first=James Alan|pages=471–488|language=en|doi=10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199566747.013.021}}</ref> | |||
] tales "The Doom of the Griffiths" (1858) "Lois the Witch", and "The Grey Woman" all employ one of the most common themes of Gothic fiction, the power of ancestral sins to curse future generations, or the fear that they will. | |||
]'' (1818), ]'s Gothic parody]] | |||
The gloomy villain, forbidding mansion, and persecuted heroine of ]'s '']'' (1864) shows the direct influence of both Walpole's ''Otranto'' and Radcliffe's ''Udolpho''. Le Fanu's short story collection '']'' (1872) includes the superlative vampire tale '']'', which provided fresh blood for that particular strand of the Gothic and influenced ] '']'' (1897). According to literary critic ], Le Fanu, together with his predecessor Maturin and his successor Stoker, form a sub-genre of Irish Gothic, whose stories, featuring castles set in a barren landscape, with a cast of remote aristocrats dominating an atavistic peasantry, represent in allegorical form the political plight of colonial Ireland subjected to the ] <ref>Eagleton (1995).</ref> | |||
The saturation of Gothic-inspired literature during the 1790s was referred to in a letter by ], writing on 16 March 1797, "indeed I am almost weary of the Terrible, having been a hireling in the ] for the last six or eight months – I have been reviewing '']'', '']'', '']'' &c &c &c – in all of which dungeons, and old castles, & solitary Houses by the Sea Side & Caverns & Woods & extraordinary characters & all the tribe of Horror & Mystery, have crowded on me – even to surfeiting."<ref>{{Cite web|author=Norton, Rictor|url=http://rictornorton.co.uk/gothic/monk.htm |title=Gothic Readings, 1764–1840 |date=2000|access-date=May 11, 2022}}</ref> | |||
The genre was also a heavy influence on more mainstream writers, such as ], who read Gothic novels as a teenager and incorporated their gloomy atmosphere and melodrama into his own works, shifting them to a more modern period and an urban setting, including '']'' (1837-8), '']'' (1854) (Mighall 2003) and '']'' (1860–61). These pointed to the juxtaposition of wealthy, ordered and affluent civilisation next to the disorder and barbarity of the poor within the same metropolis. Bleak House in particular is credited with seeing the introduction of ] to the novel, which would become a frequent characteristic of urban Gothic literature and film (Mighall 2007). His most explicitly Gothic work is his last novel '']'' (1870). The mood and themes of the Gothic novel held a particular fascination for the Victorians, with their morbid obsession with mourning rituals, ], and mortality in general. | |||
The excesses, stereotypes, and frequent absurdities of the Gothic genre made it rich territory for satire.<ref>Skarda 1986.</ref> Historian ] notes that satire of Gothic literature was common from 1796 until the 1820s, including early satirical works such as ''The New Monk'' (1798), ''More Ghosts''! (1798) and ''Rosella, or Modern Occurrences'' (1799). Gothic novels themselves, according to Norton, also possess elements of self-satire, "By having profane comic characters as well as sacred serious characters, the Gothic novelist could puncture the balloon of the supernatural while at the same time affirming the power of the imagination."<ref>{{Cite web|author=Norton, Rictor|url=http://rictornorton.co.uk/gothic/parody.htm |title=Gothic Readings, 1764–1840, Gothic Parody |date=2000}}</ref> After 1800 there was a period in which Gothic parodies outnumbered forthcoming Gothic novels.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Potter |first=Franz J. |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/58807207 |title=The history of Gothic publishing, 1800–1835 : exhuming the trade |date=2005 |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |isbn=1-4039-9582-6 |location=Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire |oclc=58807207}}</ref> In '']'' by ] (1813), Gothic tropes are exaggerated for comic effect.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Horner |first=Avril |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/312477942 |title=Gothic and the comic turn |date=2005 |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |isbn=978-0-230-50307-6 |location=Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire |pages=27 |oclc=312477942}}</ref> In ]'s novel '']'' (1818), the naive protagonist, a female named Catherine, conceives herself as a heroine of a Radcliffean romance and imagines murder and villainy on every side. However, the truth turns out to be much more prosaic. This novel is also noted for including a list of early Gothic works known as the ].<ref>Wright (2007), pp. 29–32.</ref> | |||
] '']'' (1886) was a classic Gothic work of the 1880s, seeing many stage adaptations.]] | |||
===Second generation or ''Jüngere Romantik''=== | |||
The 1880s, saw the revival of the Gothic as a powerful literary form allied to ], which fictionalized contemporary fears like ethical degeneration and questioned the social structures of the time. Classic works of this ] include ] '']'' (1886), ] '']'' (1891), ] '']'' (1894), ]'s ''The Beetle: A Mystery'' (1897), ] '']'' (1898), and the stories of ]. The most famous Gothic villain ever, ] was created by ] in his novel '']'' (1897). Stoker's book also established ] and Eastern Europe as the ''locus classicus'' of the Gothic <ref>Mighall (2003)</ref>. | |||
The poetry, romantic adventures, and character of ]—characterized by his spurned lover ] as "mad, bad and dangerous to know"—were another inspiration for the Gothic novel, providing the archetype of the ]. For example, Byron is the title character in Lady Caroline's Gothic novel '']'' (1816). | |||
]" by ] published in '']'', 1 April 1819.]] | |||
In America, two notable writers of the end of the 19th century, in the Gothic tradition, were ] and ]. Bierce's short stories were in the horrific and pessimistic tradition of Poe. Chambers, though, indulged in the decadent style of Wilde and Machen (even to the extent of having a character named 'Wilde' in his '']''). | |||
Byron was also the host of the celebrated ghost-story competition involving himself, ], ], and ] at the Villa Diodati on the banks of ] in the summer of 1816. This occasion was productive of both Mary Shelley's '']'' (1818), and Polidori's short story "]" (1819), featuring the Byronic ]. "The Vampyre" has been accounted by cultural critic ] as one of the most influential works of fiction ever written and spawned a craze for ] and theatre (and, latterly, film) that has not ceased to this day.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Frayling | first =Christopher | author-link =Christopher Frayling | title =Vampyres: Lord Byron to Count Dracula | publisher =Faber | date =1992 | orig-year=1978 |location=London |isbn=978-0-571-16792-0 |url =https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780571167920}}</ref> Although clearly influenced by the Gothic tradition, Mary Shelley's novel is often considered the first science fiction novel, despite the novel's lack of any scientific explanation for the animation of ] and the focus instead on the ]s and consequences of such a creation. | |||
]' '']'' (1819) and '']'' (1820) feature mysteriously fey ladies.<ref name=skarda>Skarda and Jaffe (1981), pp. 33–35 and 132–133.</ref> In the latter poem, the names of the characters, the dream visions, and the macabre physical details are influenced by the novels of premiere Gothicist Ann Radcliffe.<ref name=skarda/> | |||
==Influence and legacy== | |||
===Parody=== | |||
The excesses, stereotypes, and frequent absurdities of the traditional Gothic made it rich territory for satire <ref>Skarda 1986</ref>. The most famous parody of the Gothic is ] novel '']'' (1818) in which the naive protagonist, after reading too much Gothic fiction, conceives herself a heroine of a Radcliffian romance and imagines murder and villainy on every side, though the truth turns out to be much more prosaic. Jane Austen's novel is valuable for including a list of early Gothic works since known as the ]: | |||
Although ushering in the historical novel, and turning popularity away from Gothic fiction, ] frequently employed Gothic elements in his novels and poetry.<ref>{{Cite web|author=Freye, Walter|url=https://archive.org/details/cu31924013546043/mode/2up|title=The influence of "Gothic" literature on Sir Walter Scott |date=1902|access-date=May 4, 2022}}</ref> Scott drew upon oral ], fireside tales, and ancient superstitions, often juxtaposing rationality and the supernatural. Novels such as '']'' (1819), in which the characters' fates are decided by superstition and ], or the poem '']'' (1808), in which a nun is walled alive inside a convent, illustrate Scott's influence and use of Gothic themes.<ref>{{Cite web|author=Rose Miller, Emma|url=http://www.wreview.org/attachments/article/346/Fact,%20Fiction,%20or%20Fantasy_Scott%E2%80%99s%20Historical%20Project%20and%20The%20Bride%20of%20Lammermoor.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220521104654/http://www.wreview.org/attachments/article/346/Fact,%20Fiction,%20or%20Fantasy_Scott%E2%80%99s%20Historical%20Project%20and%20The%20Bride%20of%20Lammermoor.pdf |archive-date=2022-05-21 |url-status=live|title=Fact, Fiction or Fantasy, Scott's Historical Project and The Bride of Lammermoor |date=2019|access-date=May 1, 2022}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|author=Joe Walker, Grady|url=https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/215281992.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220521104724/https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/215281992.pdf |archive-date=2022-05-21 |url-status=live|title=Scott's Refinement of The Gothic In Certain of The Waverley Novels |date=1957|access-date=May 4, 2022}}</ref> | |||
* '']'' (1794) by 'Ludwig Flammenberg' (pseudonym for Carl Friedrich Kahlert; translated by Peter Teuthold) | |||
* '']'' (1796) by the Marquis de Grosse (translated by P. Will) | |||
* '']'' (1793) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1796) by Eliza Parsons | |||
* '']'' (1798) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1798) by Eleanor Sleath | |||
* '']'' (1798) by ] | |||
A late example of a traditional Gothic novel is '']'' (1820) by ], which combines themes of ] with an ] Byronic hero.<ref>Varma 1986</ref> ]'s '']'' (1827) features standard Gothic motifs, characters, and plot, but with one significant twist; it is set in the twenty-second century and speculates on fantastic scientific developments that might have occurred three hundred years in the future, making it and ''Frankenstein'' among the earliest examples of the science fiction genre developing from Gothic traditions.<ref name="Hopkins">. Cf.ac.uk (25 January 2006). Retrieved on 18 September 2018.</ref> | |||
These books, with their lurid titles, were once thought to be the creations of Jane Austen's imagination, though later research by ] and ] confirmed that they did actually exist and stimulated renewed interest in the Gothic. They are currently all being reprinted by Valancourt Press <ref>Wright (2007) pp29-32).</ref>. | |||
During two decades, the most famous author of Gothic literature in Germany was the polymath ]. Lewis's '']'' influenced and even mentioned it in his novel '']'' (1815). The novel explores the motive of ], a term coined by another German author and supporter of Hoffmann, ], in his humorous novel '']'' (1796–1797). He also wrote an opera based on ]'s Gothic story '']'' (1816), for which de la Motte Fouqué wrote the libretto.<ref>Hogle, p. 105–122.</ref> Aside from Hoffmann and de la Motte Fouqué, three other important authors from the era were ] ('']'', 1818), ] (''Die Majoratsherren'', 1819), and ] (''Peter Schlemihls wundersame Geschichte'', 1814).<ref>Cusack, Barry, p. 91, pp. 118–123.</ref> After them, ] wrote '']'' (1838) and '']'' (1847). | |||
Another example of Gothic parody in a similar vein is ''The Heroine'' by ] (1813). Cherry Wilkinson, a fatuous female protagonist with a history of novel-reading, fancies herself as the heroine of a Gothic romance. She perceives and models reality according to the stereotypes and typical plot structures of the Gothic novel, leading to a series of absurd events culminating in catastrophe. After her downfall, her affectations and excessive imaginations become eventually subdued by the voice of reason in the form of Stuart, a paternal figure, under whose guidance the protagonist receives a sound education and correction of her misguided taste <ref>Skarda (1986)</ref> | |||
In Spain, the priest ] was the most diligent novelist in the Gothic way, closely aligned to the supernatural explained by Ann Radcliffe.<ref>Aldana, Xavier, pp. 10–17</ref> At the same time, the poet ] published '']'' (1837–1840), a narrative poem that presents a horrid variation on the ] legend. | |||
===Post-Victorian legacy=== | |||
====Pulp==== | |||
]s such as '']'' reprinted and popularized Gothic horror from the prior century.]] | |||
Notable English twentieth century writers in the Gothic tradition include ], ], ], ], and ]. In America ]s such as '']'' reprinted classic Gothic horror tales from the previous century, by such authors as Poe, ], and Edward Bulwer-Lytton and printed new stories by modern authors featuring both traditional and new horrors <ref>Goulart (1986)</ref>. The most significant of these was ] who also wrote an excellent conspectus of the Gothic and supernatural horror tradition in his '']'' (1936) as well as developing a Mythos that would influence Gothic and contemporary horror well into the 21st century. Lovecraft's protégé, ], contributed to ''Weird Tales'' and penned '']'' (1959), which drew on the classic interests of the genre. From these, the Gothic genre ''per se'' gave way to modern ], regarded by some literary critics as a branch of the Gothic <ref>(Wisker (2005) pp232-33)</ref> although others use the term to cover the entire genre. | |||
] by Gogol]] | |||
====New Gothic Romances==== | |||
In Russia, authors of the Romantic era include ] (penname of Alexey Alexeyevich Perovsky), ], ],<ref>Krys Svitlana, "" ''Folklorica: Journal of the Slavic and East European Folklore Association'', 16 (2011), pp. 117–138.</ref> ], ], ] (for his work ''Stuss''), and ].<ref name="Horner (2002), pp. 59–82">Horner (2002). ''Neil Cornwell: European Gothic and the 19th-century Gothic literature'', pp. 59–82.</ref> Pushkin is particularly important, as his 1833 short story '']'' was so popular that it was adapted into operas and later films by Russian and foreign artists. Some parts of Mikhail Yuryevich Lermontov's '']'' (1840) are also considered to belong to the Gothic genre, but they lack the supernatural elements of other Russian Gothic stories. | |||
Gothic Romances of this description became popular during the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, with authors such as ], ], ], ], ], ], and Jill Tattersall. Many featured covers depicting a terror-stricken woman in diaphanous attire in front of a gloomy ]. Many were published under the ] Gothic imprint and were marketed to a female audience. Though the authors were mostly women, some men wrote Gothic romances under female pseudonyms. For instance the prolific Clarissa Ross and Marilyn Ross were pseudonyms for the male writer ] and ] published Gothics under his wife's name, Lyda Belknap Long. Another example is British writer ], who wrote under the pseudonym Madeleine Brent. Outside of companies like Lovespell, who carry ], very few books seem to be published using the term today.{{Citation needed|date=October 2011}} | |||
The following poems are also now considered to belong to the Gothic genre: Meshchevskiy's "Lila", Katenin's "Olga", ]'s "The Bridegroom", ]'s "The Gravedigger" and ]'s '']'' (1829–1839).<ref>Cornwell (1999). Michael Pursglove: Does Russian gothic verse exist, pp. 83–102.</ref> | |||
====Southern Gothic==== | |||
]'s novels and short stories exemplified the ] genre.]] | |||
The genre also influenced ] to create the ] genre, which combines some Gothic sensibilities (such as the ]) with the setting and style of the ] . Examples include ], ], ], and ] <ref>Skarda and Jaffe (1981) pp418-56)</ref>. Contemporary American writers in this tradition include ], in such novels as '']'' and ''A Bloodsmoor Romance'' and short story collections such as ''Night-Side'' (Skarda 1986b) and ] in his novel ''Lulu Incognito''. The ] applies a similar sensibility to a Canadian cultural context. ], ], ], and ] have all produced works that are notable exemplars of this form. Another writer in this tradition was ] whose best-known work was the Hollywood horror novel '']'' (1960). Farrel's novels spawned a sub-genre of 'Grande Dame Guignol' in the cinema, dubbed the ']' genre. | |||
The key author of the transition from Romanticism to Realism, ], who was also one of the most important authors of Romanticism, produced a number of works that qualify as Gothic fiction. Each of his three short story collections features a number of stories that fall within the Gothic genre or contain Gothic elements. They include "]" and "]" from '']'' (1831–1832), "]" from ''Arabesques'' (1835), and "]" from ] (1835). While all are well known, the latter is probably the most famous, having inspired at least eight film adaptations (two now considered lost), one animated film, two documentaries, and a video game. Gogol's work differs from Western European Gothic fiction, as his cultural influences drew on ], the ] lifestyle, and, as a religious man, ].<ref>Simpson, c. p. 21.</ref><ref>Cornwell (1999). Neil Cornwell, pp. 189–234.</ref> | |||
====Modern horror==== | |||
Many modern writers of horror (or indeed other types of fiction) exhibit considerable Gothic sensibilities—examples include the works of ], as well as some of the sensationalist works of ] <ref>Skarda and Jaffe (1981) pp464-5, p478</ref> <ref>Davenport-Hines (1998) pp357-8).</ref> The Romantic strand of Gothic was taken up in ]'s '']'' (1938) which is in many respects a reworking of ]'s '']''. Other books by du Maurier, such as '']'' (1936), also display Gothic tendencies. Du Maurier's work inspired a substantial body of 'Female Gothics,' concerning heroines alternately swooning over or being terrified by scowling ] in possession of acres of prime real estate and the appertaining '']''. | |||
Other relevant authors of this era include ] (''The Living Corpse'', written 1838, published 1844, ''The Ghost'', ''The Sylphide'', as well as short stories), ] (''The Family of the Vourdalak'', 1839, and ''The Vampire'', 1841), ] (''Unexpected Guests''), ]/] (''Antar''), and ] (''The Ring'').<ref name="Horner (2002), pp. 59–82" /> | |||
===Nineteenth-century Gothic fiction=== | |||
Other notable contemporary writers in the Gothic tradition are: ], author of '']'' (1983); ], author of '']'' (1989); ], author of '']'' (1992) and '']'' (1996); and ], author of ''Silk'' (1998) <ref>Davenport-Hines (1998) pp377-8</ref> <ref>Baddeley (2002) pp84-7).</ref> | |||
{{See also|Penny dreadful|American Gothic fiction}} | |||
]'' publication, 1845]] | |||
====Other media==== | |||
By the ], Gothic had ceased to be the dominant genre for novels in England, partly replaced by more sedate ]. However, Gothic short stories continued to be popular, published in magazines or as small ] called ].<ref name="Birch"/> The most influential Gothic writer from this period was the American ], who wrote numerous short stories and poems reinterpreting Gothic tropes. His story "]" (1839) revisits classic Gothic tropes of aristocratic decay, death, and ].<ref>(Skarda and Jaffe (1981) pp. 181–182.</ref> Poe is now considered the master of the American Gothic.<ref name="Birch"/> | |||
The themes of the literary Gothic have been translated into other media. The early 1970s saw a Gothic Romance comic book mini-trend with such titles as ]' '']'' and '']'', ]' '']'', ]' ''Gothic Tales of Love'', and ]' ] magazine ''Gothic Romances''. | |||
In England, one of the most influential penny dreadfuls is the anonymously authored '']'' (1847), which introduced the ] of ]s having sharpened teeth.<ref>. ''Huffington Post''. Retrieved 27 September 2017.</ref> Another notable English author of penny dreadfuls is ], known for '']'' (1844), ''Faust'' (1846), ''Wagner the Wehr-wolf'' (1847), and ''The Necromancer'' (1857).<ref>Baddeley (2002) pp. 143–144.)</ref> ]'s tales "The Doom of the Griffiths" (1858), "Lois the Witch", and "The Grey Woman" all employ one of the most common themes of Gothic fiction: the power of ancestral ] to curse future generations, or the fear that they will. ], an English medievalist whose stories are still popular today, is known as the originator of the "antiquarian ghost story." In Spain, ] stood out with his romantic poems and short tales, some depicting supernatural events. Today some consider him the most-read Spanish writer after ].<ref>{{Cite news |url=http://www.laprovincia.es/cultura/2011/07/28/becquer-escritor-leido-despues-cervantes/390220.html |title=Bécquer es el escritor más leído después de Cervantes |date=July 28, 2011 |access-date=February 22, 2018 |newspaper=La Provincia. Diario de las Palmas |language=es}}</ref> | |||
There was a notable revival in twentieth century Gothic horror films such the classic ] films of the 1930s, ], and ]'s ] <ref>Davenport-Hines (1998) pp355-8)</ref>. In ], the Gothic tradition was combined with aspects of ], particularly reincarnation, to give rise to an "Indian Gothic" genre, beginning with the films '']'' (1949) and '']'' (1958).<ref>{{citation|last=Mishra|first=Vijay|title=Bollywood cinema: temples of desire|publisher=]|year=2002|isbn=0-415-93014-6|pages=49–57}}</ref> | |||
]'s '']'' (1847)]] | |||
In addition to these short Gothic fictions, some novels drew on the Gothic. ]'s '']'' (1847) transports the Gothic to the forbidding Yorkshire Moors and features ghostly apparitions and a Byronic hero in the person of the demonic Heathcliff. The Brontës' fictions were cited by feminist critic ] as prime examples of Female Gothic, exploring woman's entrapment within domestic space and subjection to patriarchal authority and the transgressive and dangerous attempts to subvert and escape such restriction.<ref>{{Cite book |title=Literary Women |last=Moers |first=Ellen |year=1976 |publisher=Doubleday |isbn=9780385074278}}</ref> Emily Brontë's ''Cathy'' and ]'s '']'' are examples of female protagonists in such roles.<ref>Jackson (1981) pp. 123–129.</ref> ]'s Gothic potboiler, '']'' (written in 1866 but published in 1995), is also an interesting specimen of this subgenre. Charlotte Brontë's '']'' also shows the Gothic influence, with its supernatural subplot featuring a ghostly nun, and its view of ] as exotic and heathenistic.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Johnson |first1=E. D. H. |title="Daring the Dread Glance": Charlotte Brontë's Treatment of the Supernatural in Villette |journal=Nineteenth-Century Fiction |date=1966 |volume=20 |issue=4 |pages=325–336 |doi=10.2307/2932664|jstor=2932664 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Clarke |first1=Micael M. |title=Charlotte Brontë's "Villette", Mid-Victorian Anti-Catholicism, and the Turn to Secularism |journal=ELH |date=2011 |volume=78 |issue=4 |pages=967–989 |doi=10.1353/elh.2011.0030 |jstor=41337561 |s2cid=13970585 |issn=0013-8304|url=https://ecommons.luc.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1015&context=english_facpubs }}</ref> ]'s novel '']'', about a family's ancestral home, is colored with suggestions of the supernatural and ]; and in true Gothic fashion, it features the house itself as one of the main characters, | |||
Twentieth century rock music also had its Gothic side. ]'s 1969 debut album created a dark sound different from other bands at the time and has been called the first ever "Goth-rock" record <ref>Baddeley (2002) p264</ref>. Themes from Gothic writers such as ] were also used among ] and ] bands, especially in ], ] (]'s ''The Call of Ktulu''), ], and ]. For example, heavy metal musician ] delights in telling stories full of horror, theatricality, ] and ] in his compositions <ref>Baddeley (2002) p265</ref> | |||
] from Charles Dickens' ''Great Expectations'' (1861)]] | |||
==Elements of Gothic fiction== | |||
The genre also heavily influenced writers such as ], who read Gothic novels as a teenager and incorporated their gloomy atmosphere and melodrama into his works, shifting them to a more modern period and an urban setting; for example, in '']'' (1837–1838), '']'' (1854) and '']'' (1860–1861). These works juxtapose wealthy, ordered, and affluent civilization with the disorder and barbarity of the poor in the same metropolis. ''Bleak House,'' in particular, is credited with introducing ] to the novel, which would become a frequent characteristic of urban Gothic literature and film.<ref>Mighall, 2007.</ref> ] from ''Great Expectations'', is one of Dickens' most Gothic characters. The bitter recluse shuts herself away in her gloomy mansion ever since being jilted at the altar on her wedding day.<ref>{{cite news |title=The Gothic in Great Expectations |url=https://www.bl.uk/romantics-and-victorians/videos/the-gothic-in-great-expectations |access-date=16 August 2021 |agency=] |archive-date=31 July 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230731073817/https://www.bl.uk/romantics-and-victorians/videos/the-gothic-in-great-expectations |url-status=dead }}</ref> His most explicitly Gothic work is his last novel, ''],'' which he did not live to complete and was published unfinished upon his death in 1870.<ref>{{cite news |title=Edwin Drood: Charles Dickens's last mystery finally solved? |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-leeds-16483950 |access-date=25 July 2024 |publisher=BBC|quote=Dealing with the story of drug-addicted choirmaster John Jasper, The Mystery of Edwin Drood is a "dark and gothic" tale which is "very spooky, scary and modern"}}</ref> The mood and themes of the Gothic novel held a particular fascination for the Victorians, with their obsession with mourning rituals, ], and mortality in general. | |||
===Archetypes in the Gothic Novel=== | |||
As David De Vore states, “The Gothic hero becomes a sort of archetype as we find that there is a pattern to their characterization. There is always the protagonist, usually isolated either voluntarily or involuntarily. Then there is the villain, who is the epitome of evil, either by his (usually a man) own fall from grace, or by some implicit malevolence. The Wanderer, found in many Gothic tales, is the epitome of isolation as he wanders the earth in perpetual exile, usually a form of divine punishment.”<ref name="De Vore">{{cite web|last=De Vore|first=David|title=The Gothic Novel|url=http://cai.ucdavis.edu/waters-sites/gothicnovel/155breport.html|work=The Gothic Novel}}</ref> Below are classified different stock characters of the Gothic Novel along with examples from popular fiction in the genre. | |||
] also wrote Gothic fiction in the 19th century. Although some ] dominated and defined the subgenre decades later, they did not own it. Irish Catholic Gothic writers included ], ], and ] and ]. ] was a notable Gothic writer, and converted from Catholicism to Anglicanism.<ref>{{Cite book |title=The Emergence of Irish Gothic Fiction |last=Killeen |first=Jarlath |date=2014-01-31 |publisher=Edinburgh University Press |isbn=978-0-7486-9080-0 |pages=51 |doi=10.3366/edinburgh/9780748690800.001.0001 |s2cid=192770214 |url=http://www.oapen.org/download/?type=document&docid=649971}}</ref> | |||
* '''Virginal Maiden''' – young, beautiful, pure, innocent, kind, virtuous. Shows these virtues by fainting and crying whenever her delicate sensibilities are challenged, usually starts out with a mysterious past and it is later revealed that she is the daughter of an aristocratic or noble family. | |||
** Matilda in ] – She is determined to give up Theodore, the love of her life, for her cousin’s sake. Matilda always puts others first before herself, and always believes the best in others. | |||
** Adeline in ] - “Her wicked Marquis, having secretly immured Number One (his first wife), has now a new and beautiful wife, whose character, alas! Does not bear inspection.”<ref>{{cite journal|last=Lang|first=Andrew|title=Mrs. Radcliffe's Novels|journal=Cornhill Magazine|year=1900|month=July|issue=9:49}}</ref> As this review states, the virginal maiden character is above inspection because her personality is flawless. Hers is a virtuous character whose piety and unflinching optimism causes all to fall in love with her. | |||
In Switzerland, ] wrote '']'' (1842), an allegorical work that uses Gothic themes. The last work from the German writer ], '']'' (1888), also uses Gothic motives and themes.<ref>Cusack, Barry, p. 26.</ref> | |||
* '''Older, Foolish Woman''' | |||
** Hippolita in ''The Castle Of Otranto'' - Hippolita is depicted as the obedient wife of her tyrant husband who “would not only acquiesce with patience to divorce, but would obey, if it was his pleasure, in endeavouring to persuade Isabelle to give him her hand”.<ref>{{cite book|last=Walpole|first=Horace|title=The Castle of Otranto|year=1764|publisher=Penguin}}</ref> This shows how weak women are portrayed as they are completely submissive, and in Hippolita’s case, even support polygamy at the expense of her own marriage.<ref>{{cite web|title=How are Women Depicted and Treated in Gothic Novels|url=http://www.megaessays.com/viewpaper/29375.html}}</ref> | |||
** Madame LaMotte in ''The Romance of the Forest'' – naively assumes that her husband is having an affair with Adeline. Instead of addressing the situation directly, she foolishly lets her ignorance turn into pettiness and mistreatment of Adeline. | |||
After Gogol, Russian literature saw the rise of Realism, but many authors continued to write stories within Gothic fiction territory. ], one of the most celebrated Realists, wrote ''Faust'' (1856), ''Phantoms'' (1864), ''Song of the Triumphant Love'' (1881), and ''Clara Milich'' (1883). Another classic Russian Realist, ], incorporated Gothic elements into many of his works, although none can be seen as purely Gothic.<ref>Cornwell (1999). pp. 211–256.</ref> ], who wrote historical and early science fiction novels and stories, wrote ''Mertvec-ubiytsa'' (''Dead Murderer'') in 1879. Also, ] wrote "Zaklyatiy kazak", which may now also be considered Gothic.<ref name="Butuzov">Butuzov.</ref> | |||
* '''Hero''' | |||
** Theodore in ''The Castle of Otranto'' – he is witty, and successfully challenges the tyrant, saves the virginal maid without expectations | |||
** Theodore in ''The Romance of the Forest'' – saves Adeline multiple times, is virtuous, courageous and brave, self-sacrificial | |||
]'s '']'' (1886) was a classic Gothic work of the 1880s, seeing many stage adaptations.]] | |||
* '''Tyrant''' | |||
The 1880s saw the revival of the Gothic as a powerful literary form allied to ], which fictionalized contemporary fears like ethical degeneration and questioned the social structures of the time. Classic works of this ] include ]'s '']'' (1886), ]'s '']'' (1891), ]'s '']'' (1894), ]'s '']'' (1897), ]' '']'' (1898), and the stories of ]. | |||
** Manfred in ''The Castle of Otranto'' – unjustly accuses Theodore of murdering Conrad. Tries to put his blame onto others. Lies about his motives for attempting to divorce his wife and marry his late son’s fiancé. | |||
** The Marquis in ''The Romance of the Forest'' – attempts to get with Adeline even though he is already married, attempts to rape Adeline, blackmails Monsieur LaMotte. | |||
** '']'' – Ninth Caliph of the Abassides, who ascended to the throne at an early age. His figure was pleasing and majestic, but when angry, his eyes became so terrible that “the wretch on whom it was fixed instantly fell backwards and sometimes expired”. He was addicted to women and pleasures of the flesh, so he ordered five palaces to be built: the five palaces of the senses. Although he was an eccentric man, learned in the ways of science, physics, and astrology, he loved his people. His main greed, however, was thirst for knowledge. He wanted to know everything. This is what led him on the road to damnation.”<ref>{{cite journal|last=Melville|first=Lewis|title=Vathek|journal=Athenaeum|date=27|year=1909|month=November|issue=4283}}</ref> | |||
In Ireland, Gothic fiction tended to be purveyed by the ] ]. According to literary critic ], ], ], and ] form the core of the ] with stories featuring castles set in a barren landscape and a cast of remote aristocrats dominating an ] peasantry, which represent an allegorical form the political plight of ] subjected to the Protestant Ascendancy.<ref>Eagleton, 1995.</ref> Le Fanu's use of the gloomy villain, forbidding mansion, and persecuted heroine in '']'' (1864) shows direct influence from Walpole's ''Otranto'' and Radcliffe's ''Udolpho''. Le Fanu's short story collection '']'' (1872) includes the superlative vampire tale '']'', which provided fresh blood for that particular strand of the Gothic and influenced ]'s ] novel '']'' (1897). Stoker's book created the most famous Gothic villain ever, ], and established ] and ] as the ''locus classicus'' of the Gothic.<ref>Mighall, 2003.</ref> Published in the same year as ''Dracula'', ]'s '']'' is another piece of vampire fiction. ''The Blood of the Vampire'', which, like ''Carmilla,'' features a female vampire, is notable for its treatment of vampirism as both ] and medicalized. The vampire, Harriet Brandt, is also a ], killing unintentionally.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Haefele-Thomas |first=Ardel |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt9qhdw4 |title=Queer Others in Victorian Gothic: Transgressing Monstrosity |date=2012 |publisher=University of Wales Press |jstor=j.ctt9qhdw4 |isbn=978-0-7083-2464-6 |edition=1st}}</ref> | |||
* '''The Stupid Servant''' – acts as comic relief by asking seemingly stupid questions, transitions between scenes, brings news, messenger, moves plot forward | |||
** Peter in ''The Romance of the Forest'' – whenever he brings information to people, he never gets to the point but prattles on and on about insignificant things. “The reader…eagerly follows the flight of LaMotte, also of Peter, his coachman, an attached, comic, and familiar domestic.”<ref>{{cite journal|last=Timbs|first=John|title=By the Genius of Romance|journal=Mirror of Amusement, Literature, and Instruction|date=20|year=1830|month=March|issue=15:420}}</ref> | |||
** Bianca in ''The Castle of Otranto'' – a gossip, helps characters get valuable news, provides comic relief | |||
In the United States, notable late 19th-century writers in the Gothic tradition were ], ], and ]. Bierce's short stories were in the horrific and pessimistic tradition of Poe. Chambers indulged in the decadent style of Wilde and Machen, even including a character named Wilde in his '']'' (1895).<ref>{{cite book |last1=Punter |first1=David |title=The Literature of Terror: A History of Gothic Fictions from 1765 to the Present Day |date=1980 |publisher=Longmans |location=United Kingdom |isbn=9780582489219 |pages=268–290 |chapter=Later American Gothic}}</ref> Wharton published some notable Gothic ghost stories. Some works of the Canadian writer ] also fall into the genre, including the stories in '']'' (1900).<ref>{{Cite book |title="Introduction" to The Lane that Had No Turning, and Other Tales Concerning the People of Pontiac |last=Rubio |first=Jen |publisher=Rock's Mills Press |year=2015 |isbn=978-0-9881293-7-5 |location=Oakville, ON |pages=vii – viii}}</ref> | |||
* '''Clowns''' – break the tension and act as comic relief | |||
** Diego and Jaquez in ''The Castle of Otranto'' – they appear to talk about random things, and argue foolishly with each other in order to lighten the air of the novel. | |||
]'' (1887) by ] ]] | |||
* '''Banditti ‑ Ruffians''' | |||
The serialized novel '']'' (1909–1910) by the French writer ] is another well-known example of Gothic fiction from the early 20th century, when many German authors were writing works influenced by ''Schauerroman'', including ].<ref>Cusack, Barry, p. 23.</ref> | |||
** They appear in several Gothic Novels including ''The Romance of the Forest'' in which they kidnap Adeline from her father. | |||
====Russian Gothic==== | |||
* '''Clergy''' – always weak, usually evil | |||
Until the 1990s, Russian Gothic critics did not view Russian Gothic as a genre or label. If used, the word "gothic" was used to describe (mostly early) works of ] from the 1880s. Most critics used tags such as "Romanticism" and "]", such as in the 1984 story collection translated into English as ''Russian 19th-Century Gothic Tales'' but originally titled ''Фантастический мир русской романтической повести'', literally, "The Fantastic World of Russian Romanticism Short Story/Novella."<ref>Cornwell (1999). Introduction.</ref> However, since the mid-1980s, Russian gothic fiction as a genre began to be discussed in books such as ''The Gothic-Fantastic in Nineteenth-Century Russian Literature'', ''European Gothic: A Spirited Exchange 1760–1960'', ''The Russian Gothic Novel and its British Antecedents'' and ''Goticheskiy roman v Rossii (The Gothic Novel in Russia)''. | |||
** Father Jerome in ''The Castle of Otranto'' – Jerome, though not evil, is certainly weak as he gives up his son when he is born and leaves his lover. | |||
** Ambrosio in '']'' – Evil and weak, this character stoops to the lowest levels of corruption including rape and incest. | |||
** Mother Superior in ''The Romance of the Forest'' – Adeline fled from this convent because the sisters weren’t allowed to see sunlight. Highly oppressive environment. | |||
The first Russian author whose work has been described as gothic fiction is considered to be ]. While many of his works feature gothic elements, the first to belong purely under the gothic fiction label is ''Ostrov Borngolm'' (''Island of Bornholm'') from 1793.<ref>Cornwell (1999). Derek Offord: ''Karamzin's Gothic Tale'', pp. 37–58.</ref> Nearly ten years later, ] followed suit with his 1803 novel ''Don Corrado de Gerrera'', set in Spain during the reign of ].<ref>Cornwell (1999). Alessandra Tosi: "At the origins of the Russian gothic novel", pp. 59–82.</ref> The term "Gothic" is sometimes also used to describe the ]s of Russian authors such as ], particularly "Ludmila" (1808) and "]" (1813), both translations based on ]'s Gothic German ballad, "]".<ref>Cornwell (1999). Michael Pursglove: "Does Russian gothic verse exist?" pp. 83–102.</ref> | |||
* '''The Setting''' | |||
** The setting of the Gothic Novel is a character in itself. The plot is usually set in a castle, an abbey, a monastery, or some other, usually religious edifice, and it is acknowledged that this building has secrets of its own. It is this gloomy and frightening scenery, which sets the scene for what the audience should expect. The importance of setting is noted in a London review of the ''Castle of Otranto'', “He describes the country towards Otranto as desolate and bare, extensive downs covered with thyme, with occasionally the dwarf holly, the rosa marina, and lavender, stretch around like wild moorlands…Mr. Williams describes the celebrated Castle of Otranto as “an imposing object of considerable size…has a dignified and chivalric air. A fitter scene for his romance he probably could not have chosen.” Similarly, De Vore states, “The setting is greatly influential in Gothic novels. It not only evokes the atmosphere of horror and dread, but also portrays the deterioration of its world. The decaying, ruined scenery implies that at one time there was a thriving world. At one time the abbey, castle, or landscape was something treasured and appreciated. Now, all that lasts is the decaying shell of a once thriving dwelling.”<ref name="De Vore"/> Thus, without the decrepit backdrop to initiate the events, the Gothic Novel would not exist. | |||
During the last years of ] in the early 20th century, many authors continued to write in the Gothic fiction genre. They include the historian and historical fiction writer ] and ], who developed psychological characterization; the symbolist ], ], ];<ref>Cornwell (1999). p. 257.</ref> and ].<ref name="Butuzov"/> Nobel Prize winner ] wrote '']'' (1912), which is seen as influenced by Gothic literature.<ref>Peterson, p. 36.</ref> In a monograph on the subject, Muireann Maguire writes, "The centrality of the Gothic-fantastic to Russian fiction is almost impossible to exaggerate, and certainly exceptional in the context of world literature."<ref>Muireann Maguire, ''Stalin's Ghosts: Gothic Themes in Early Soviet Literature'' (Peter Lang Publishing, 2012; {{ISBN|3-0343-0787-X}}), p. 14.</ref> | |||
===Role of Architecture in the Gothic Novel=== | |||
Gothic literature is intimately associated with the ] of the same era. In a way similar to the Gothic revivalists' rejection of the clarity and rationalism of the ] style of the ] Establishment, the literary Gothic embodies an appreciation of the joys of extreme emotion, the thrills of fearfulness and awe inherent in the ], and a quest for ''atmosphere''. | |||
===Twentienth-century Gothic fiction=== | |||
The ruins of Gothic buildings gave rise to multiple linked emotions by representing the inevitable decay and collapse of human creations—thus the urge to add fake ruins as eyecatchers in English landscape parks. English Gothic writers often associated medieval buildings with what they saw as a dark and terrifying period, characterized by harsh laws enforced by torture, and with mysterious, fantastic, and superstitious rituals. In literature such ] had a European dimension featuring ] institutions such as the Inquisition (in southern European countries such as Italy and Spain). | |||
{{See also|Pulp magazine}} | |||
] in the ] of ]'s '']''. The success of ''Rebecca'' inspired a revival of interest in Gothic romance in the 20th century.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://patch.com/connecticut/groton/bp--more-classic-riffs|last=Clark-Greene|first=Barbara|date=2012 |title=More Classic Riffs |website=]}}</ref>]] | |||
Gothic fiction and ] influenced each other. This is often evident in ], horror fiction, and science fiction, but the influence of the Gothic can also be seen in the high literary Modernism of the 20th century. ]'s '']'' (1890) initiated a re-working of older literary forms and myths that became common in the work of ], ], ], ], ], and ], among others.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Hansen |first=Jim |date=2011 |title=A Nightmare on the Brain: Gothic Suspicion and Literary Modernism |journal=Literature Compass |volume=8 |issue=9 |pages=635–644 |doi=10.1111/j.1741-4113.2010.00763.x}}</ref> In Joyce's ] (1922), the living are transformed into ghosts, which points to an Ireland in stasis at the time and a history of cyclical trauma from the ] in the 1840s through to the current moment in the text.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Wurtz |first=James F. |date=2005 |title=Scarce More a Corpse: Famine Memory and Representations of the Gothic in Ulysses |journal=Journal of Modern Literature |volume=29 |pages=102–117 |doi=10.2979/JML.2005.29.1.102 |s2cid=161368941 |id={{ProQuest|201671206}}}}</ref> The way ''Ulysses'' uses Gothic tropes such as ghosts and hauntings while removing the supernatural elements of 19th-century Gothic fiction indicates a general form of modernist Gothic writing in the first half of the 20th century. | |||
]s such as '']'' reprinted and popularized Gothic horror from the previous century.]] | |||
====Use in the Gothic Novel==== | |||
In America, ]s such as '']'' reprinted classic Gothic horror tales from the previous century by authors like Poe, ], and ], and printed new stories by modern authors featuring both traditional and new horrors.<ref>Goulart (1986)</ref> The most significant of these was ], who also wrote a conspectus of the Gothic and supernatural horror tradition in his '']'' (1936), and developed a ] that would influence Gothic and contemporary horror well into the 21st century. Lovecraft's protégé, ], contributed to ''Weird Tales'' and penned '']'' (1959), which drew on the classic interests of the genre. From these, the Gothic genre ''per se'' gave way to modern ], regarded by some literary critics as a branch of the Gothic,<ref>(Wisker (2005) pp. 232–233)</ref> although others use the term to cover the entire genre. | |||
Just as elements of Gothic architecture were borrowed during the Gothic Revival period in architecture, ideas about the Gothic period and Gothic period architecture were often used by Gothic novelists. Architecture itself played a role in the naming of Gothic novels, with many titles referring to castles or other common Gothic buildings. This naming was followed up with many Gothic novels often set in Gothic buildings, with the action taking place in castles, abbeys, convents and monasteries, many of them in ruins, evoking “feelings of fear, surprise, confinement”. This setting of the novel, a castle or religious building, often one fallen into disrepair, was an essential element of the Gothic novel. Placing a story in a Gothic building served several purposes. It drew on feelings of awe, it implied the story was set in the past, it gave an impression of isolation or being cut off from the rest of the world and it drew on the religious associations of the Gothic style. This trend of using Gothic architecture began with the '']'' and was to become a major element of the genre from that point forward. | |||
The Romantic strand of Gothic was taken up in ]'s '']'' (1938), which is seen by some to have been influenced by ]'s '']''.<ref>Yardley, Jonathan (16 March 2004). "Du Maurier's 'Rebecca,' A Worthy 'Eyre' Apparent". ''The Washington Post''.</ref> Other books by du Maurier, such as '']'' (1936), also display Gothic tendencies. Du Maurier's work inspired a substantial body of "female Gothics," concerning heroines alternately swooning over or terrified by scowling ] in possession of acres of prime real estate and the appertaining '']''. | |||
Besides using Gothic architecture as a setting, with the aim of eliciting certain associations from the reader, there was an equally close association between the use of Gothic architecture and the storylines of Gothic novels, with the architecture often serving as a mirror for the characters and the plot lines of the story.<ref>Bayer-Berenbaum, L. 1982. ''The Gothic Imagination: Expansion in Gothic Literature and Art''. Rutherford: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press.</ref> The buildings in the ''Castle of Otranto'', for example, are riddled with underground tunnels, which the characters use to move back and forth in secret. This secret movement mirrors one of the plots of the story, specifically the secrets surrounding Manfred’s possession of the castle and how it came into his family.<ref>Walpole, H. 1764 (1968). ''The Castle of Otranto''. Reprinted in ''Three Gothic Novels''. London: Penguin Press</ref> The setting of the novel in a Gothic castle was meant to imply not only a story set in the past but one shrouded in darkness. | |||
===Southern Gothic=== | |||
In ], architecture was used to both illustrate certain elements of Vatheks character and also warn about the dangers of over-reaching. Vathek’s hedonism and devotion to the pursuit of pleasure are reflected in the pleasure wings he adds on to his castle, each with the express purpose of satisfying a different sense. He also builds a tall tower in order to further his quest for knowledge. This tower represents Vatheks pride and his desire for a power that is beyond the reach of humans. He is later warned that he must destroy the tower and return to Islam or else risk dire consequences. Vathek’s pride wins out and, in the end, his quest for power and knowledge ends with him confined to Hell.<ref>Beckford, W. 1782 (1968). ''The History of the Caliph Vathek''. Reprinted in ''Three Gothic Novels''. London: Penguin Press.</ref> | |||
{{main|Southern Gothic}} | |||
The genre also influenced ], creating a ] genre that combines some Gothic sensibilities, such as the ], with the setting and style of the ]. Examples include ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ].<ref>Skarda and Jaffe (1981), pp. 418–456.)</ref> | |||
===New Gothic romances=== | |||
In the '']'' the castle that Matilda seeks refugee at while on the run is believed to haunted. Matilda discovers it is not ghosts but the Countess of Wolfenbach who lives on the upper floors and who has been forced into hiding by her husband, the Count. Matilda’s discovery of the Countess and her subsequent informing others of the Countesses presence destroys the Counts secret. Shortly after Matilda meets the Countess the Castle of Wolfenbach itself is destroyed in a fire, mirroring the destruction of the Counts attempts to keep his wife a secret and how his plots throughout the story eventually lead to his own destruction.<ref>Parsons, E. 1793 (2006). ''The Castle of Wolfenbach''. Chicago: Valencourt Press.</ref> | |||
Mass-produced Gothic romances became popular in the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s with authors such as ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and Jill Tattersall. Many featured covers show a terror-stricken woman in diaphanous attire in front of a gloomy castle, often with a single-lit window. Many were published under the ] Gothic imprint and marketed to female readers. While the authors were mostly women, some men wrote Gothic romances under female pseudonyms: the prolific Clarissa Ross and Marilyn Ross were pseudonyms of the male ]; ] published Gothics under his wife's name, Lyda Belknap Long; the British writer ] wrote under the pseudonym Madeleine Brent. After the gothic romance boom faded away in the early 1990s, very few publishers embraced the term for mass market romance paperbacks apart from imprints like Love Spell, which was discontinued in 2010.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://openlibrary.org/publishers/Love_Spell |title=Open Library On Internet Archive}}</ref> However, in recent years the term "Gothic Romance" is being used to describe both old and new works of Gothic fiction.<ref>{{Cite web |title=What Is Gothic Romance? 13 Books That Will Enchant Your Inner Gothic Fan |website=Book Riot |url=https://bookriot.com/gothic-romance/}}</ref> | |||
=== Contemporary Gothic === | |||
The major part of the action in the '']'' is set in an abandoned and ruined abbey and the building itself served as a moral lesson, as well as a major setting for and mirror of the action in the novel. The setting of the action in a ruined abbey, drawing on Burke’s aesthetic theory of the ] established the location as a place of terror and of safety. Burke argued the sublime was a source of awe or fear brought about by strong emotions such as terror or mental pain. On the other end of the spectrum was the beautiful, which were those things that brought pleasure and safety. Burke argued that the sublime was the more preferred to the two. Related to the concepts of the sublime and the beautiful is the idea of the ], introduced by William Gilpin, which was thought to exist between the two other extremes. The picturesque was that which continued elements of both the sublime and the beautiful and can be thought of as a natural or uncultivated beauty, such as a beautiful ruin or a partially overgrown building. In ''Romance of the Forest'' Adeline and the La Mottes live in constant fear of discovery by either the police or Adeline’s father and, at times, certain characters believe the castle to be haunted. On the other hand, the abbey also serves as a comfort, as it provides shelter and safety to the characters. Finally, it is picturesque, in that it was a ruin and serves as a combination of the both the natural and the human. By setting the story in the ruined abbey, Radcliffe was able to use architecture to draw on the aesthetic theories of the time and set the tone of the story in the minds of the reader. As with many of the buildings in Gothic novels, the abbey also has a series of tunnels. These tunnels serve as both a hiding place for the characters and as a place of secrets. This was mirrored later in the novel with Adeline hiding from the Marquis de Montalt and the secrets of the Marquis, which would eventually lead to his downfall and Adelines salvation.<ref name="Radcliffe, A 2009">Radcliffe, A. 1791 (2009). ''The Romance of the Forest''. Chicago: Valencourt Press.</ref> | |||
{{For|modern horror associated with the goth scene|Goth subculture#Books and magazines}}Gothic fiction continues to be extensively practised by contemporary authors. Many modern writers of horror or other types of fiction exhibit considerable Gothic sensibilities – examples include ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ].<ref>Skarda and Jaffe (1981) pp. 464–465 and 478.</ref><ref>Davenport-Hines (1998) pp. 357–358).</ref> ]'s novel ''The Priest'' (1994) was subtitled ''A Gothic Romance'' and partly modeled on Matthew Lewis' ''The Monk''.<ref>Linda Parent Lesher, ''The Best Novels of the Nineties: A Reader's Guide''. McFarland, 2000 {{ISBN|0-7864-0742-5}}, p. 267.</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=This Haunting New Bestseller Is Part du Maurier, Part del Toro | website=Slate | url=https://slate.com/culture/2020/07/mexican-gothic-book-review-silvia-moreno-garcia-novel.html }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Carmen Maria Machado Has Invented a New Genre: the Gothic Memoir |website=Electric Literature | url=https://electricliterature.com/carmen-maria-machado-has-invented-a-new-genre-the-gothic-memoir/}}</ref> Many writers such as Billy Martin, Stephen King, ], and ] have focused on the body's surface and blood's visuality.<ref>Stephanou, Aspasia, ''Reading Vampire Gothic Through Blood'', Palgrave, 2014.</ref> England's ] is among the recent writers of Gothic fiction. ] won a British Fantasy Award for Best Horror Novel for her gothic novel '']'' in 2016. | |||
Contemporary American writers in the tradition include ] with such novels as '']'' and ''A Bloodsmoor Romance'', ] with her radical novel '']'', about a slave-woman whose murdered baby haunts her, ] with his novel ''Lulu Incognito'',<ref>{{Cite web |title=The American Gothic – Digital Collections for the Classroom |url=https://dcc.newberry.org/?p=14394 |access-date=2023-05-03 |language=en-US}}</ref> ] with her postmodern gothic horror novel '']'',<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Gothic Terror of Donna Tartt's The Secret History |url=https://horrorobsessive.com/2022/01/20/the-gothic-terror-of-donna-tartts-the-secret-history/ |website=Horror Obsessive}}</ref> ] with her ]-inspired novel '']'', ] with her "gothic extravaganza" ''The Ancestor'',<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Ancestor: Passion Trips Reason in this Gothic Extravaganza |website=Kirkus |url=https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/danielle-trussoni/the-ancestor/}}</ref> and filmmaker ] with ''Bluebeard's Castle'', a throwback to 18th-century Gothic novels and 1960s dime-store romances.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Anna Biller on How the Gothic Gives Voice to Women's Pleasure—and Pain |url=https://electricliterature.com/anna-biller-bluebeards-castle-gothic-novel-book-interview/}}</ref> British writers who have continued in the Gothic tradition include ] with her haunted house novel '']'',<ref>{{Cite web | title=A Review of The Little Stranger—The Novel | url=https://thebooksofdaniel.com/2020/08/03/a-review-of-the-little-stranger-the-novel/}}</ref> ] with her quintessentially Gothic novels '']''<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Thirteenth Tale: Gothic Storytelling at its Best |url=https://medium.com/a-thousand-lives/the-thirteenth-tale-gothic-storytelling-at-its-best-4266e5fcacf3/}}</ref> and '']'', ] with her experimental novel '']'',<ref>{{Cite web |title=Gothic Ambiguity: Helen Oyeyemi's White is for Witching |website=Blackgate |url=https://www.blackgate.com/2013/06/23/gothic-ambiguity-helen-oyeyemis-white-is-for-witching/}}</ref> ] with her novels ''Melmoth'' and '']'',<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Essex Serpent by Sarah Perry review – a compulsive novel of ideas |website=The Guardian |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2016/jun/16/the-essex-serpent-sarah-perry-review-novel}}</ref> and ] with her historical novels ''The Silent Companions'' and ''The Shape of Darkness.''<ref>{{Cite web |title=Book Review: The Silent Companions by Laura Purcell | website=The BiblioSanctum |url=https://bibliosanctum.com/2018/04/03/book-review-the-silent-companions-by-laura-purcell/}}</ref> | |||
Architecture served as an additional character in many Gothic novels, bringing with it associations to the past and to secrets and, in many cases, moving the action along and foretelling future events in the story. | |||
Several Gothic traditions have also developed in New Zealand (with the subgenre referred to as New Zealand Gothic or ] Gothic)<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Kavka |first1=Misha |title=The Gothic and the everyday: living Gothic |date=16 October 2014 |isbn=978-1-137-40664-4 |pages=225–240 |publisher=Springer }}</ref> and Australia (known as Australian Gothic). These explore everything from the multicultural natures of the two countries<ref>{{Cite web |title=Hello Darkness: New Zealand Gothic |url=https://robertleonard.org/hello-darkness-new-zealand-gothic/ |website=robertleonard.org |access-date=26 July 2020}}</ref> to their natural geography.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Wide Open Fear: Australian Horror and Gothic Fiction |url=https://www.thisishorror.co.uk/columns/southern-dark/wide-open-fear-australian-horror-and-gothic-fiction/ |website=This Is Horror |access-date=26 July 2020 |date=10 January 2013}}</ref> Novels in the Australian Gothic tradition include ]'s '']'' and the works of ].<ref>{{Cite web |last1=Doolan |first1=Emma |title=Australian Gothic: from Hanging Rock to Nick Cave and Kylie, this genre explores our dark side |url=https://theconversation.com/australian-gothic-from-hanging-rock-to-nick-cave-and-kylie-this-genre-explores-our-dark-side-111742 |website=The Conversation |access-date=26 July 2020 |language=en}}</ref> An even smaller genre is ], set exclusively on the island, with prominent examples including '']'' by ] and '']'' by ].<ref>{{Cite news |last=Sussex |first=Lucy |date=June 27, 2019 |title=Rohan Wilson's audacious experiment with climate-change fiction |work=] |url=https://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/books/rohan-wilson-s-audacious-experiment-with-climate-change-fiction-20190627-p521sk.html |access-date= |quote=The result is a book that while with one foot in Tasmanian Gothic, does represent a personal innovation.}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Holgate |first=Ben |date=2014 |title=The Impossibility of Knowing: Developing Magical Realism's Irony in Gould's Book of Fish |url= |journal=Journal of the Association for the Study of Australian Literature (JASAL) |volume=14 |issue=1 |pages= |issn=1833-6027 |quote=On one level, the book is a picaresque romp through colonial Tasmania in the early 1800s based on the not very reliable reminiscences of Gould, a convicted forger, painter of fish and inveterate raconteur. On another level, the novel is a Gothic horror tale in its reimagining of a violent, brutal and oppressive penal colony whose militaristic regime subjugated both the imported and original inhabitants. }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Britten |first1=Naomi |last2=Trilogy |first2=Mandala |last3=Bird |first3=Carmel |date=2010 |title=Re-imagining the Gothic in Contemporary Australia: Carmel Bird Discusses Her Mandala Trilogy |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41957860 |journal=Antipodes |volume=24 |issue=1 |pages=98–103 |jstor=41957860 |issn=0893-5580 |quote=Richard Flanagan, Gould's Book of Fish, would have to be Gothic. Tasmanian history is pro-foundly dark and dreadful.}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Derkenne |first=Jamie |date=2017 |title=Richard Flanagan's and Alexis Wright's Magic Nihilism |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.13110/antipodes.31.2.0276 |journal=Antipodes |volume=31 |issue=2 |pages=276–290 |doi=10.13110/antipodes.31.2.0276 |jstor=10.13110/antipodes.31.2.0276 |issn=0893-5580 |quote=Flanagan in Gould's Book of Fish and Wanting also seeks to interrogate assumed complacency through a strangely comic and dark rerendering of reality to draw out many truths, such as Tasmania's treatment of its Indigenous peoples. |via=}}</ref> Another Australian author, ], has penned several homages to classic gothic fiction, among them '']'' and '']''.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Distant Hours |url=https://www.bookreporter.com/reviews/the-distant-hours}}</ref> | |||
===The Female Gothic and the Supernatural Explained=== | |||
Characterized by its castles, dungeons, gloomy forests and hidden passages, from the Gothic novel genre emerged the Female Gothic. Guided by the works of authors such as ], ] and ], the Female Gothic permitted the introduction of feminine societal and sexual desires into Gothic texts. The Medieval society, in which Gothic texts are based, granted women writers the opportunity to attribute “features of the mode as the result of the suppression of female sexuality, or else as a challenge to the gender hierarchy and values of a male-dominated culture”.<ref name="Abrams">M.H. Abram ''A Glossary of Literary Terms'', Ninth Edition, Wadsworth Cengage Learning, 2009.</ref> | |||
] applies a similar sensibility to a Canadian cultural context. ], ], ], ], and ] have all produced notable exemplars of this form. Another writer in the tradition was ], best known for his 1960 Hollywood horror novel '']'' Farrell's novels spawned a subgenre of "Grande Dame Guignol" in the cinema, represented by such films as ], which starred ] versus ]; this subgenre of films was dubbed the "]" genre. | |||
Significantly, with the development of the ] came the literary technique of ''explaining the supernatural''. The Supernatural Explained - as this technique was aptly named - is a recurring plot device in Radcliffe’s '']''. The novel, published in 1791, is among Radcliffe’s earlier works. The novel sets up suspense for horrific events, which all have natural explanations. | |||
Outside the English-speaking world, ] literature has been gaining momentum since the first decades of the 21st century. Some of the main authors whose style has been described as Gothic are ], ], ], ], ], and ]. | |||
An eighteenth-century response to the novel from the '']'' reads: “We must hear no more of enchanted forests and castles, giants, dragons, walls of fire and other ‘monstrous and prodigious things;’ – yet still forests and castles remain, and it is still within the province of fiction, without overstepping the limits of nature, to make use of them for the purpose of creating surprise.”<ref name="Hookham">Hookham "The Romance of the Forest: interspersed with some Pieces of Poetry." ''Monthly Review'', p.82, May 1973.</ref> | |||
The many Gothic subgenres include a new "environmental Gothic" or "ecoGothic".<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://perditanovel.com/the-eco-gothic-2/ |title=The Ecogothic |first=Max |last=says |date=November 23, 2014}}</ref><ref>Hillard, Tom. "'Deep Into That Darkness Peering': An Essay on Gothic Nature". ''Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment'', 16 (4), 2009.</ref><ref>Smith, Andrew and William Hughes. "Introduction: Defining the ecoGothic" in ''EcoGothic''. Andrew Smith and William Hughes, eds. Manchester University Press. 2013.</ref> | |||
Radcliffe’s use of Supernatural Explained is characteristic of the Gothic author. The female protagonists pursued in these texts are often caught in an unfamiliar and terrifying landscape, delivering higher degrees of horror. The end result, however, is the explained supernatural, rather than terrors familiar to women, such as rape, incest, ghosts or haunted castles. | |||
It is an ecologically aware Gothic engaged in "dark nature" and "ecophobia."<ref>Simon Estok, "Theorizing in a Space of Ambivalent Openness: Ecocriticism and Ecophobia", ''Literature and Environment'', 16 (2), 2009; Simon Estok, ''The Ecophobia Hypothesis'', Routledge, 2018.</ref> | |||
Writers and critics of the ecoGothic suggest that the Gothic genre is uniquely positioned to speak to anxieties about ] and the planet's ecological future.<ref>See "ecoGothic" in William Hughes, Key Concepts in the Gothic. Edinburgh University Press, 2018: 63.</ref> | |||
Among the bestselling books of the 21st century, the ] '']'' by ] is now increasingly identified as a Gothic novel, as is ]'s 2001 novel '']''.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Edwards |first1=Justin |last2=Monnet |first2=Agnieszka |title=The Gothic in Contemporary Literature and Popular Culture: Pop Goth |date=15 February 2013 |publisher=Taylor and Francis |isbn=9781136337888}}</ref> | |||
In Radcliffe’s ''The Romance of the Forest'', one may follow the female protagonist, Adeline, through the forest, hidden passages and abbey dungeons, “without exclaiming, ‘How these antique towers and vacant courts/ chill the suspended soul, till expectation wears the cast of fear!”<ref name="Hookham"/> | |||
==Other media== | |||
The decision of Female Gothic writers to supplement true supernatural horrors with explained cause and effect transforms romantic plots and Gothic tales into common life and writing. Rather than establish the romantic plot in impossible events Radcliffe strays away from writing “merely fables, which no stretch of fancy could realize.”<ref name="Hay-Market">Hay-Market's Belle Assemblee; or Court and fashionable magazine, p. 39, July 1809.</ref> | |||
Literary Gothic themes have been translated into other media. There was a notable revival in 20th-century ], such as the classic ] films of the 1930s, ] films, and ]'s Poe cycle.<ref>Davenport-Hines (1998) pp. 355–358)</ref> In ], the Gothic tradition was combined with aspects of ], particularly reincarnation, for an "Indian Gothic" genre, beginning with '']'' (1949) and '']'' (1958).<ref>{{Cite book |last=Mishra |first=Vijay |title=Bollywood cinema: temples of desire |publisher=]|year=2002 |isbn=0-415-93014-6 |pages=49–57}}</ref> The 1960s Gothic television series '']'' borrowed liberally from Gothic traditions, with elements like haunted mansions, vampires, witches, doomed romances, werewolves, obsession, and madness. The early 1970s saw a ] comic book mini-trend with such titles as ]' '']'' and '']'', ]' '']'', ]' ''Gothic Tales of Love'', and ]' ] magazine ''Gothic Romances''. | |||
] of ] (pictured in 1989) was an influential figure in the ] that emerged in the 1980s]] | |||
English scholar Chloe Chard’s published introduction to ''The Romance of the Forest'' refers to the “promised effect of terror”. The outcome, however, “may prove less horrific than the novel has originally suggested”. Radcliffe sets up suspense throughout the course of the novel, insinuating a supernatural or superstitious cause to the mysterious and horrific occurrences of the plot. However, the suspense is relieved with the Supernatural Explained. | |||
Twentieth-century rock music also had its Gothic side. ]'s 1970 ] created a dark sound different from other bands at the time and has been called the first-ever "goth-rock" record.<ref>Baddeley (2002) p. 264.</ref> However, the first recorded use of "gothic" to describe a style of music was for ]. Critic John Stickney used the term "gothic rock" to describe the music of The Doors in October 1967 in a review published in '']''.<ref name=Stickney>{{cite news|last=Stickney |first=John |date=24 October 1967 |title=Four Doors to the Future: Gothic Rock Is Their Thing |newspaper=] |url=http://mildequator.com/performancehistory/articlesreviews1967.html |access-date=11 March 2013 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130504231130/http://mildequator.com/performancehistory/articlesreviews1967.html |archive-date=4 May 2013 }}</ref> Other forerunners who initially shaped the aesthetics and musical conventions of gothic rock include ],<ref>{{cite book |last=Reynolds |first=Simon |authorlink=Simon Reynolds |date=26 March 2008 |title=A Life Less Lived: The Gothic Box}}</ref> ], ], ], and ].<ref name=North>{{cite journal |last=North |first=Richard |date=19 February 1983 |title=Punk Warriors |journal=]}}</ref> Critic ] retrospectively described ]'s 1978 song "]"—with its lyrics inspired by ]'s 1847 novel '']'' featuring ] as a ghost and the tortured anti-hero ]—as "Gothic romance distilled into four-and-a-half minutes of gaseous rhapsody".<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2014/aug/21/kate-bush-queen-of-art-pop-defied-critics-london-concerts |author=Reynolds, Simon |title=Kate Bush, the queen of art-pop who defied her critics |work=The Guardian|date=21 August 2014 |access-date=10 March 2016}}</ref> ] as a music genre emerged in late 1970s England, with ]'s debut single, "]", released in late 1979, retrospectively considered to be the beginning of the genre.{{sfn|Reynolds|2005|p=432}} This was followed by the album '']'' by ] a year later, and in the early 1980s, post-punk bands such as ] and ] included more gothic characteristics in their music.{{sfn|Reynolds|2005|pp=428–429}} Tracing the genre from its 18th-century literary roots through its flourishing as a music subculture from the late 1970s onward, the Cure's ] wrote, "Goth is about being in love with the melancholy beauty of existence".<ref>{{cite news |title=The Cure’s Lol Tolhurst: ‘Goth is about being in love with the melancholy beauty of existence’ |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2023/sep/17/the-cure-lol-tolhurst-goth-book-interview-robert-smith |access-date=30 November 2024 |work=The Guardian}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Goth: A History by Lol Tolhurst review – the dark is rising |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2023/sep/21/goth-a-history-by-lol-tolhurst-review-the-dark-is-rising |access-date=30 November 2024 |work=The Guardian}}</ref> Themes from Gothic writers such as ] were used among Gothic rock and ] bands, especially in ], ] (]'s ''The Call of Ktulu''), ], and ]. For example, in his compositions, heavy metal musician ] delights in telling stories full of horror, theatricality, ], and ].<ref>Baddeley (2002) p. 265.</ref> | |||
In ] (RPG), the pioneering 1983 '']'' adventure '']'' instructs the players to defeat the vampire ], who pines for his dead lover. It has been acclaimed as one of the best role-playing adventures ever and even inspired ]. The '']'' is a gothic-punk RPG line set in the real world, with the added element of supernatural creatures such as ] and ]s. In addition to its flagship title '']'', the game line features a number of spin-off RPGs such as '']'', '']'', ], '']'', and '']'', allowing for a wide range of characters in the gothic-punk setting. '']'' uses Gothic horror conventions as a metaphor for ]s, placing the players in the shoes of minions of a tyrannical, larger-than-life Master.<ref name="Darlington2003">{{Cite web |last1=Darlington |first1=Steve |title=Review of My Life with Master |url=https://www.rpg.net/reviews/archive/9/9681.phtml |website=] |access-date=9 July 2019 |date=8 September 2003}}</ref> | |||
For example, Adeline is reading the illegible manuscripts she found in her bedchamber’s secret passage in the abbey when she hears a chilling noise from beyond her doorway. She goes to sleep unsettled, only to awake and learn that what she assumed to be haunting spirits were actually the domestic voices of the servant, Peter. La Motte, her caretaker in the abbey, recognizes the heights to which her imagination reached after reading the autobiographical manuscripts of a past murdered man in the abbey. | |||
Various ] feature Gothic horror themes and plots. The '']'' series typically involves a hero of the Belmont lineage exploring a dark, old castle, fighting vampires, werewolves, Frankenstein's Creature, and other Gothic monster staples, culminating in a battle against Dracula himself. Others, such as '']'', feature a camper parody of Gothic fiction. 2017's '']'', a Southern Gothic reboot to the survival horror video game involves an everyman and his wife trapped in a derelict plantation and mansion owned by a family with sinister and hideous secrets and must face terrifying visions of a ghostly mutant in the shape of a little girl. This was followed by 2021's '']'', a Gothic horror sequel focusing on an action hero searching for his kidnapped daughter in a mysterious Eastern European village under the control of a bizarre religious cult inhabited by werewolves, vampires, ghosts, shapeshifters, and other monsters. The '']'' series stands as an equally parodic and self-serious franchise, following the escapades, stunts and mishaps of series protagonist ] as he explores dingy demonic castles, ancient occult monuments and ruined urban landscapes on his quest to avenge his mother and brother. Gothic literary themes appear all throughout the story, such as how the past physically creeps into the ambiguously modern setting, recurrent imagery of doubles (notably regarding Dante and his ]), and the persisting melodramas associated with Dante's father's fame, absence, and demonic heritage. Beginning with '']'', Female Gothic elements enter the series as deuteragonist ] works through her own revenge plot against her murderous father, with the oppressive and consistent emotional and physical abuse instigated by a patriarchal figure serving as a heavy, understated counterweight to the extravagance of the rest of the story. Finally, '']'' takes place in the decaying Gothic city of ], where the player must face werewolves, shambling mutants, vampires, witches, and numerous other Gothic staple creatures. However, the game takes a marked turn midway shifting from gothic to ]. | |||
:“‘I do not wonder, that after you had suffered its terrors to impress your imagination, you fancied you saw specters, and heard wondrous noises.’ La Motte said. | |||
:‘God bless you! Ma’amselle,’ said Peter. | |||
:‘I’m sorry I frightened you so last night.’ | |||
:‘Frightened me,’ said Adeline; ‘how was you concerned in that?’ | |||
Popular tabletop card game '']'', known for its ] consisting of "planes," features the plane known as ]. Its general aesthetic is based on northeast European Gothic horror. Innistard's common residents include cultists, ghosts, vampires, werewolves, and zombies. | |||
He then informed her, that when he thought Monsieur and Madame La Motte were asleep, he had stolen to her chamber door... that he had called several times as loudly as he dared, but receiving no answer, he believed she was asleep... This account of the voice she had heard relieved Adeline’s spirits; she was even surprised she did not know it, till remembering the perturbation of her mind for some time preceding, this surprise disappeared.”<ref name="Radcliffe">Radcliffe ''The Romance of the Forest'', Oxford University Press, 1986.</ref> | |||
Film director ], whose influences include Universal Monsters movies such as ''Frankenstein'', Hammer Horror films starring ] and the horror films of ], is known for creating a gothic aesthetic in his films.<ref>{{cite news |title=Tim Burton has built his career around an iconic visual aesthetic. Here's how it evolved |url=https://www.vox.com/culture/2019/4/17/18285309/tim-burton-films-visual-style-aesthetic-disney-explained |access-date=30 November 2024 |work=Voz}}</ref> Modern Gothic horror films include '']'',<ref>{{Cite web |title=SLEEPY HOLLOW: A MODERN DAY GOTHIC CLASSIC |website=Film Obsessive |url=https://filmobsessive.com/film/film-analysis/filmmakers/tim-burton/sleepy-hollow-a-modern-day-gothic-classic/#google_vignette}}</ref> '']'',<ref>{{Cite web |title=Interview With The Vampire 1994 Reviewed |website=Horror Movies Reviewed |url=https://www.horrormoviesreviewed.com/post/interview-with-the-vampire-1994-reviewed}}</ref> '']'',<ref>{{Cite web |title=Looking Back on the Gothic Action-Horror of the 'Underworld' Franchise |website=Bloody Disgusting |url=https://bloody-disgusting.com/editorials/3666384/looking-back-gothic-action-horror-underworld-franchise/}}</ref> '']'',<ref>{{Cite web |title=Does she hath charms to soothe the savage breast? |website=RogerEbert.com |url=https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/the-wolfman-2010}}</ref> '']'',<ref>{{Cite web |title=From Hell (2001): Albert and Allen Hughes Conventional Gothic Thriller, Starring Johnny Depp |website=Emanuel Levy |url=https://emanuellevy.com/review/from-hell-4/}}</ref> '']'',<ref>{{Cite web |title= Dorian Gray |website=The Film Stage |url=https://thefilmstage.com/review-dorian-gray/}}</ref> '']'',<ref>{{Cite web |title=Let the Right One In |website=The Guardian |url=https://www.theguardian.com/film/2009/apr/12/let-the-right-one-in}}</ref> '']'',<ref>{{Cite web |title=A haunted house with its own sound effects |website=RoberEbert.com |url=https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/the-woman-in-black-2012}}</ref> '']'',<ref>{{Cite web |title=A 'FASCINATING CONUNDRUM OF A MOVIE': GOTHIC, HORROR AND CRIMSON PEAK |website=Revenant Journal |url=https://www.revenantjournal.com/contents/a-fascinating-conundrum-of-a-movie-gothic-horror-and-crimson-peak-2015-frances-a-kamm/}}</ref> '']'',<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Little Stranger |website=RogerEbert.com |url=https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/the-little-stranger-2018}}</ref> and '']''.<ref>{{cite web |title=Enamoured with 'The Love Witch' |website=Generally Gothic | url=https://generallygothic.com/2019/05/02/enamoured-with-the-love-witch/}}</ref> | |||
While Adeline is alone in her characteristically Gothic chamber, she detects something supernatural, or mysterious about the setting. However, the “actual sounds that she hears are accounted for by the efforts of the faithful servant to communicate with her, there is still a hint of supernatural in her dream, inspired, it would be seem, by the fact that she is on the spot of her father’s murder and that his unburied skeleton is concealed in the room next hers”.<ref name="McIntyre">McIntyre "Were the "Gothic Novels" Gothic?" ''PMLA'', vol. 36, No. 4, 1921.</ref> | |||
The TV series '']'' (2014–2016) brings many classic Gothic characters together in a psychological thriller set in the dark corners of Victorian London.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://deadline.com/2013/09/sky-atlantic-to-co-produce-showtimes-penny-dreadful-billie-piper-joins-cast-587962/ |title=Sky Atlantic To Co-Produce Showtime's 'Penny Dreadful'; Billie Piper Joins Cast |website=Deadline Hollywood |first=Nancy |last=Tartaglione |date=September 16, 2013 |access-date=November 24, 2015 |archive-date=April 27, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150427124640/http://deadline.com/2013/09/sky-atlantic-to-co-produce-showtimes-penny-dreadful-billie-piper-joins-cast-587962/ |url-status=live}}</ref> The Oscar-winning Korean film '']'' has also been called Gothic – specifically, Revolutionary Gothic.<ref>{{Cite web |last1=Southard |first1=Connor |title='Parasite' and the rise of Revolutionary Gothic |url=https://theoutline.com/post/8279/parasite-us-revolutionary-gothic?zd=1&zi=57wvaudi |website=theoutline.com |access-date=2 March 2020 |date=20 November 2019}}</ref> Recently, the ] original '']'' and its successor '']'' have integrated classic Gothic conventions into modern psychological horror.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://nerdist.com/article/haunting-of-bly-manor-review/ |title='The Haunting of Bly Manor' Is a Beautiful Gothic Romance |website=Nerdist |first=Lindsey |last=Romain |date=October 5, 2020 |access-date=December 29, 2020}}</ref> | |||
The supernatural here is indefinitely explained, but what remains is the “tendency in the human mind to reach out beyond the tangible and the visible; and it is in depicting this mood of vague and half-defined emotion that Mrs. Radcliffe excels”.<ref name="McIntyre"/> | |||
==Scholarship== | |||
Transmuting the Gothic novel into a comprehendible tale for the imaginative Eighteenth Century woman was useful for the Female Gothic writers of the time. Novels were an experience for these women who had no outlet for a thrilling excursion. Sexual encounters and superstitious fantasies were idle elements of the imagination. However, the use of Female Gothic and Supernatural Explained, are a “good example of how the formula changes to suit the interests and needs of its current readers”. | |||
Educators in literary, cultural, and architectural studies appreciate the Gothic as an area that facilitates investigation of the beginnings of scientific certainty. As ] has stated, "the Gothic was... a counterbalance produced by writers and thinkers who felt limited by such a confident worldview and recognized that the power of the past, the irrational, and the violent continue to sway in the world."<ref>Carol Senf, "Why We Need the Gothic in a Technological World," in: ''Humanistic Perspectives in a Technological World'', ed. Richard Utz, Valerie B. Johnson, and Travis Denton (Atlanta: School of Literature, Media, and Communication, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2014), pp. 31–32.</ref> As such, the Gothic helps students better understand their doubts about the self-assurance of today's scientists. Scotland is the location of what was probably the world's first postgraduate program to consider the genre exclusively: the MLitt in the Gothic Imagination at the ], first recruited in 1996.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Hughes |first1=William |title=Historical Dictionary of Gothic Literature |date=2012 |publisher=Scarecrow Press}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | |||
In many respects, the novel’s “current reader” of the time was the woman who “lay down her book with affected indifference, or momentary shame,”<ref name="Austen">"Austen's ''Northanger Abbey''", Second Edition, Broadview, 2002.</ref> according to ], author of '']''. The Gothic novel shaped its form for female readers to “turn to Gothic romances to find support for their own mixed feelings”.<ref name="Ronald">Ronald "Terror Gothic: Nightmare and Dream in Ann Radcliffe and Charlotte Bronte", ''The Female Gothic'', Ed. Fleenor, Eden Press Inc, 1983.</ref> | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
Following the characteristic Gothic '']''-like plot sequence, the Female Gothic allowed its readers to graduate from “adolescence to maturity,”<ref name="Nichols">Nichols "Place and Eros in Radcliffe", Lewis and Bronte, ''The Female Gothic'', Ed. Fleenor, Eden Press Inc., 1983.</ref> in the face of the realized impossibilities of the supernatural. As female protagonists in novels like Adeline in ''The Romance of the Forest'' learn that their superstitious fantasies and terrors are replaced with natural cause and reasonable doubt, the reader may understand the true position of the heroine in the novel: | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
“The heroine possesses the romantic temperament that perceives strangeness where others see none. Her sensibility, therefore, prevents her from knowing that her true plight is her condition, the disability of being female.”<ref name="Nichols"/> | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
Another text in which the heroine of the Gothic Novel encounters the Supernatural Explained is ''The Castle of Wolfenbach'' (1793) by Gothic author Eliza Parsons. This Female Gothic text by Parsons is listed as one of Catherine Morland's Gothic texts in Austen's ''Northanger Abbey''. The heroine in ''The Castle of Wolfenbach'', Matilda, seeks refuge after overhearing a conversation in which her Uncle Weimar speaks of plans to rape her. Matilda finds asylum in the Castle of Wolfenbach: a castle inhabited by old married caretakers who claim that the second floor is haunted. Matilda, being the courageous heroine, decides to explore the mysterious wing of the Castle. | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
Bertha, wife of Joseph, (caretakers of the castle) tells Matilda of the "other wing": "Now for goodness sake, dear madam, don't go no farther, for as sure as you are alive, here the ghosts live, for Joseph says he often sees lights and hears strange things."<ref name="Parsons">Parsons. ''The Castle of Wolfenbach'', Valancourt Books, Kansas City, 2007.</ref> | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
However, as Matilda ventures through the castle, she finds that the wing is not haunted by ghosts and rattling chains, but rather, the Countess of Wolfenbach. The supernatural is explained, in this case, ten pages into the novel, and the natural cause of the superstitious noises is a Countess in distress. Characteristic of the Female Gothic, the natural cause of terror is not the supernatural, but rather female disability and societal horrors: rape, incest and the threatening control of the male antagonist. | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
===Anti-Catholicism=== | |||
* ] | |||
In general, Gothic novels are placed in countries strongly associated with Catholicism, such as Spain and Italy.{{Citation needed|date=October 2011}} Many characters are directly associated with the church such as priests, monks, and friars and because these characters are supposed to be a direct representation of the church and they are supposed to be characters of high moral standards, many authors write these religious characters to be especially egregious.{{Citation needed|date=October 2011}} | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* In ]'s '''The Castle of Otranto''' any sinful happenings revolve around Friar Jerome.{{Citation needed|date=October 2011}} | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* In '''Zeluco''', ] spends much of the novel addressing the animosity between Protestants and Catholics.{{Citation needed|date=October 2011}} | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] creates in '''The Monk''' one of the most anti-Catholic characters in Gothic literature.{{Citation needed|date=October 2011}} A much revered, pious monk named Ambrosio soon falls into sin. | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
==Prominent examples== | |||
* ] | |||
{{Col-begin}} | |||
* ] | |||
{{Col-2}} | |||
* ] | |||
* ''], an Arabian Tale'' (1786) by ] ( at ]) | |||
*'']'' (1789) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1794) by ] ( at Project Gutenberg) | |||
* '']'' (1797) by ] () | |||
* '']'' (1797) by Mrs Carver | |||
* '']'' (1798) by ] | |||
* '']: A Tale of the Sixteenth Century'' (1799) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1800) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1805) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1810) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1811) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1818) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1820) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1821) by ] ( at Project Gutenberg) | |||
* '']'' (1824) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1824) by ] ( at Project Gutenberg) | |||
* '']'' (1831) by ] | |||
* "]" (1835) by ] | |||
* "]" (1836) by Nathaniel Hawthorne | |||
* ''] (1838) by ] | |||
* ''] (1839) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1839) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1839) by ] | |||
* "Bela" and "Tamanj" (short stories) in '']'' (1840) by ]<ref>http://www.bibliographing.com/2010/03/08/a-hero-of-our-time-by-mikhail-lermontov/</ref><ref>http://users.stargate.net/~ffrank/RUSSIAN_GOTHIC.html</ref> | |||
* "]" (1843) by Edgar Allan Poe (] at ]) | |||
* '']'' (1844) by ] ( at openlibrary.org) | |||
* '']'' (1850) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1851) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1859) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1863) by ] (] at Wikisource) | |||
* '']'' (1864) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1887) by ] (] at Wikisource) | |||
* '']'' (1891) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1892) by ] ( at Project Gutenberg) | |||
* '']'' (1895) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1897) by ] | |||
* ''The Real Right Thing'' (1899) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1902) by ] ( at Project Gutenberg) | |||
* '']'' (1907) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1907) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1910) by ] ( at Project Gutenberg) | |||
* '']'' (1910) by ] | |||
* "]" (1910) by Edith Wharton | |||
* '']'' (1911) by Bram Stoker (] at Wikisource) | |||
* "]" (1926) by ] ( at Temple of Dagon.com) | |||
* '']'' (1932) by ] | |||
{{Col-2}} | |||
* '']'' (1933) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1938) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1942) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1943) by ] (Hadji 1986: 350) | |||
* '']'' (1945) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1948) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1948) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1949) by ] | |||
* "]" (1951) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1951) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1952) by ] | |||
* ''Long Distance Call'' (1953) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1955) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1946–1959) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1954) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1958) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1959) by Shirley Jackson | |||
* '']'' (1963) by Shirley Jackson | |||
* '']'' (1967) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1968) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1971) by Daphne du Maurier | |||
* '']'' (1970) by ]<ref>Smith, Andrew and Hughes, William. , p. 175.</ref> | |||
* '']'' (1972) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1972) by Ira Levin | |||
* '']'' (1974) By ] | |||
* '']'' (1974) By ] | |||
* '']'' (1975) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1975) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1976) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1976) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1977) by Stephen King | |||
* '']'' (1980) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1981) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1981) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1983) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1987) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1987) by ] | |||
* ''Endless Night'' (1987) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1992) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1997) by ] | |||
* '']'' (1998) by ] | |||
* '']'' (2000) by ] | |||
* '']'' (2001) by ] | |||
* '']'' (2002) (English translation) by ] | |||
* '']'' (2002) by ] and ] | |||
* '']'' (2002) by Donna Tartt | |||
* '']'' (2003) by ] | |||
*'']'' (2004) by ] | |||
* '']'' (2006) by ] | |||
* ''Dark Satanic Mills'' ( (2006) by ] | |||
* ] (2007) directed by Tim Burton | |||
* '' "The House on Black Lake" (2010) by Anastasia Blackwell | |||
{{Col-end}} | |||
===Gothic satire=== | |||
* '']'' (1818) by ] ( at Project Gutenberg) | |||
* '']'' (1840) by ] ( at The Ex-Classics Website) | |||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
{{Reflist}} | {{Reflist|30em}} | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{refbegin|30em}} | |||
* Baddeley, Gavin, (2002) ''Goth Chic''. London: Plexus. | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Aldana Reyes |first=Xavier |title=Spanish Gothic: National Identity, Collaboration and Cultural Adaptation |year=2017 |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |isbn=978-1137306005|ref=none}} | |||
* Baldick, Chris (1993)''Introduction,'' in ''The Oxford Book of Gothic Tales''. Oxford: Oxford University Press. | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Baddeley |first=Gavin |author-link= Gavin Baddeley |title=Goth Chic |year=2002 |publisher=Plexus |location=London |isbn=978-0-85965-382-4|ref=none}} | |||
* ] (1921). ''The Tale of Terror''. | |||
* Baldick, Chris (1993), ''Introduction,'' in ''The Oxford Book of Gothic Tales'', Oxford: Oxford University Press | |||
* Bloom, Clive (2007). ''Gothic Horror: A Guide for Students and Readers''. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. | |||
* ] (1921), ''The Tale of Terror'' | |||
* Botting, Fred (1996). ''Gothic''. London: Routledge. | |||
* Bloom, Clive (2007), ''Gothic Horror: A Guide for Students and Readers'', Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan | |||
* Brown, Marshall (2005). ''The Gothic Text''. Stanford, CA: Stanford UP. | |||
* |
* Botting, Fred (1996), ''Gothic'', London: Routledge | ||
* |
* Brown, Marshall (2005), ''The Gothic Text'', Stanford, CA: Stanford UP | ||
* Butuzov, A.E. (2008), ''Russkaya goticheskaya povest XIX Veka'' | |||
* Cook, Judith (1980). ''Women in Shakespeare''. London: Harrap & Co. Ltd. | |||
* Charnes, Linda (2010), ''Shakespeare and the Gothic Strain'', Vol. 38, pp. 185 | |||
* Davenport-Hines, Richard (1998) ''Gothic: 400 Years of Excess, Horror, Evil and Ruin''. London: Fourth Estate. | |||
* |
* Clery, E.J. (1995), ''The Rise of Supernatural Fiction'', Cambridge: ]. | ||
* Cornwell, Neil (1999), ''The Gothic-Fantastic in Nineteenth-Century Russian Literature'', Amsterdam: Atlanta, GA: Rodopi, Studies in Slavic Literature and Poetics, volume 33 | |||
* Drakakis, John & Dale Townshend (2008). ''Gothic Shakespeares''. New York: Routledge. | |||
* Cook, Judith (1980), ''Women in Shakespeare'', London: Harrap & Co. Ltd | |||
* ] (1995). ''Heathcliff and the Great Hunger''. NY: Verso. | |||
* Cusack A., Barry M. (2012), ''Popular Revenants: The German Gothic and Its International Reception, 1800–2000'', Camden House | |||
* Fuchs, Barbara, (2004), ''Romance''. London: Routledge. | |||
* Davenport-Hines, Richard (1998), ''Gothic: 400 Years of Excess, Horror, Evil and Ruin'', London: Fourth Estate | |||
* Gamer, Michael, (2006), ''Romanticism and the Gothic. Genre, Reception and Canon Formation''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. | |||
* |
* Davison, Carol Margaret (2009), ''Gothic Literature 1764–1824'', Cardiff: ] | ||
* Drakakis, John & Dale Townshend (2008), ''Gothic Shakespeares'', New York: Routledge | |||
* ] and ] (1979). '']''. ISBN 0-300-08458-7 | |||
* ] (1995), ''Heathcliff and the Great Hunger'', New York: Verso | |||
* ] (1986) "The Pulps" in Jack Sullivan (ed) ''The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural: 337-40''. | |||
* Fuchs, Barbara (2004), ''Romance'', London: Routledge | |||
* Grigorescu, George (2007) . ''Long Journey Inside The Flesh''. Bucharest, Romania ISBN978-0-8059-8468-2 | |||
* Gamer, Michael (2006), ''Romanticism and the Gothic. Genre, Reception and Canon Formation'', Cambridge: Cambridge University Press | |||
* Hadji, Robert (1986) "Jean Ray" in ''The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural'' edited by Jack Sullivan. | |||
* |
* Gibbons, Luke (2004), ''Gaelic Gothic'', Galway: Arlen House | ||
* ] and ] (1979), '']''. {{ISBN|0-300-08458-7}} | |||
* Halberstam, Judith (1995). ''Skin Shows''. Durham, NC: Duke UP. | |||
* ] (1986), "The Pulps" in Jack Sullivan and Pedro Chamo, ed., ''The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural: 337-40'' | |||
* Horner, Avril & Sue Zlosnik (2005). ''Gothic and the Comic Turn''. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. | |||
* Grigorescu, George (2007), ''Long Journey Inside The Flesh'', Bucharest, Romania {{ISBN|978-0-8059-8468-2}} | |||
* Jackson, Rosemary (1981). ''Fantasy: The Literature of Subversion''. | |||
* Hadji, Robert (1986), "Jean Ray" in Jack Sullivan, ed., ''The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural'' | |||
* Kilgour, Maggie, (1995). ''The Rise of the Gothic Novel''. London: Routledge. | |||
* Haggerty, George (2006), ''Queer Gothic'', Urbana, IL: Illinois UP | |||
* Medina, Antoinette, (2007). ''A Vampires Vedas''. | |||
* Halberstam, Jack (1995), ''Skin Shows'', Durham, NC: Duke UP | |||
* Mighall, Robert, (2003), ''A Geography of Victorian Gothic Fiction: Mapping History's Nightmares''. Oxford: Oxford University Press. | |||
* |
* Hogle, J.E. (2002), ''The Cambridge Companion to Gothic Fiction'', Cambridge University Press | ||
* Horner, Avril & Sue Zlosnik (2005), ''Gothic and the Comic Turn'', Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan | |||
* O'Connell, Lisa (2010). ''The Theo-political Origins of the English Marriage Plot,'' "Novel: A Forum on Fiction". Vol. 43, Issue 1, pp. 31–37. | |||
* Horner, Avril (2002), ''European Gothic: A Spirited Exchange 1760–1960'', Manchester & New York: ] | |||
* Punter, David, (1996), ''The Literature of Terror''. London: Longman. (2 vols). | |||
* Hughes, William, ''Historical Dictionary of Gothic Literature'', Scarecrow Press, 2012 | |||
* Punter, David, (2004), ''The Gothic'', London: Wiley-Blackwell. | |||
* Jackson, Rosemary (1981), ''Fantasy: The Literature of Subversion'' | |||
* Sabor, Peter & Paul Yachnin (2008). ''Shakespeare and the Eighteenth Century''. Ashgate Publishing Ltd. | |||
* Kilgour, Maggie (1995), ''The Rise of the Gothic Novel'', London: Routledge | |||
* Salter, David (2009). ''This demon in the garb of a monk: Shakespeare, the Gothic and the discourse of anti-Catholicism''. Vol. 5, Issue 1, pp. 52–67. | |||
* Jürgen Klein (1975), ''Der Gotische Roman und die Ästhetik des Bösen'', Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft | |||
* Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky (1986). ''The Coherence of Gothic Conventions''. NY: Methuen. | |||
* Jürgen Klein, Gunda Kuttler (2011), ''Mathematik des Begehrens'', Hamburg: Shoebox House Verlag | |||
* Shakespeare, William (1997). ''The Riverside Shakespeare: Second Edition''. Boston, NY: Houghton Mifflin Co. | |||
* Korovin, Valentin I. (1988), ''Fantasticheskii mir russkoi romanticheskoi povesti'' | |||
* Skarda, Patricia L., and Jaffe, Norma Crow (1981) ''Evil Image: Two Centuries of Gothic Short Fiction and Poetry''. New York: Meridian. | |||
* Medina, Antoinette (2007), ''A Vampires Vedas'' | |||
* Skarda, Patricia, (1986) "Gothic Parodies" in Jack Sullivan ed. (1986) ''The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural: 178-9''. | |||
* Mighall, Robert (2003), ''A Geography of Victorian Gothic Fiction: Mapping History's Nightmares'', Oxford: Oxford University Press | |||
* Skarda, Patricia, (1986b) "Oates, Joyce Carol" in Jack Sullivan ed. (1986) ''The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural: 303-4''. | |||
* Mighall, Robert (2007), "Gothic Cities", in C. Spooner and E. McEvoy, eds, ''The Routledge Companion to Gothic'', London: Routledge, pp. 54–72 | |||
* Stevens, David (2000). ''The Gothic Tradition''. ISBN 0-521-77732-1 | |||
* O'Connell, Lisa (2010), ''The Theo-political Origins of the English Marriage Plot,'' ], Vol. 43, Issue 1, pp. 31–37 | |||
* ], ed. (1986). '']''. | |||
* Peterson, Dale (1987), The Slavic and East European Journal, Vol. 31, No. 1 (Spring, 1987), pp. 36–49 | |||
* ] (1938). ''The Gothic Quest''. | |||
* |
* Punter, David (1996), ''The Literature of Terror'', London: Longman (2 volumes) | ||
* |
* Punter, David (2004), ''The Gothic'', London: Wiley-Blackwell | ||
* {{cite book |last=Reynolds |first=Simon |author-link=Simon Reynolds |year=2005 |title=] |chapter=Chapter 22: 'Dark Things: Goth and the Return of Rock' |location=London |publisher=] |isbn=0-571-21569-6}} | |||
* Varma, Devendra, (1986) "Maturin, Charles Robert" in Jack Sullivan (ed) ''The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural: 285-6''. | |||
* Sabor, Peter & Paul Yachnin (2008), ''Shakespeare and the Eighteenth Century'', Ashgate Publishing Ltd | |||
* Wisker, Gina (2005). ''Horror Fiction: An Introduction''. Continuum: New York. | |||
* Salter, David (2009), ''This demon in the garb of a monk: Shakespeare, the Gothic and the discourse of anti-Catholicism'', Vol. 5, Issue 1, pp. 52–67 | |||
* Wright, Angela (2007). ''Gothic Fiction''. Basingstoke: Palgrave. | |||
* Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky (1986), ''The Coherence of Gothic Conventions'', NY: Methuen | |||
* Shakespeare, William (1997), ''The Riverside Shakespeare: Second Edition'', Boston, NY: Houghton Mifflin Co. | |||
* Simpson, Mark S. (1986), ''The Russian Gothic Novel and its British Antecedents'', Slavica Publishers | |||
* Skarda, Patricia L., and Jaffe, Norma Crow (1981), ''Evil Image: Two Centuries of Gothic Short Fiction and Poetry''. New York: Meridian | |||
* Skarda, Patricia (1986), "Gothic Parodies" in Jack Sullivan ed. (1986), ''The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural: 178–179'' | |||
* Skarda, Patricia (1986b), "Oates, Joyce Carol" in Jack Sullivan ed. (1986), ''The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural: 303–304'' | |||
* Stevens, David (2000), ''The Gothic Tradition'', {{ISBN|0-521-77732-1}} | |||
* ], ed. (1986), '']'' | |||
* ] (1938), ''The Gothic Quest'' | |||
* Townshend, Dale (2007), ''The Orders of Gothic'' | |||
* Varma, Devendra (1957), ''The Gothic Flame'' | |||
* Varma, Devendra (1986), "Maturin, Charles Robert" in Jack Sullivan, ed., ''The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural: 285–286'' | |||
* Wisker, Gina (2005), ''Horror Fiction: An Introduction'', Continuum: New York | |||
* Wright, Angela (2007), ''Gothic Fiction'', Basingstoke: Palgrave | |||
{{refend}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
* {{Wikisource-inline}} | |||
{{wikisource|Portal:Gothic fiction|Gothic fiction}} | |||
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180525065938/https://www.bl.uk/romantics-and-victorians/themes/the-gothic |date=25 May 2018 }} | |||
* | |||
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170701084130/http://www.bl.uk/romantics-and-victorians/videos/the-gothic |date=1 July 2017 }} – a British Library film | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171218132032/http://www.gothic.stir.ac.uk/ |date=18 December 2017 }} | |||
* , ''In Our Time'', BBC Radio 4 discussion with Chris Baldick, A.N. Wilson and Emma Clery (Jan. 4, 2001) | |||
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{{Horror fiction}} | {{Horror fiction}} | ||
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Latest revision as of 21:32, 21 December 2024
Romance, horror and death literary genre "Gothic literature" redirects here. It may also refer to texts in the extinct Gothic language. For fiction associated with the goth scene, see Goth subculture § Books and magazines.
Gothic fiction, sometimes called Gothic horror (primarily in the 20th century), is a loose literary aesthetic of fear and haunting. The name refers to Gothic architecture of the European Middle Ages, which was characteristic of the settings of early Gothic novels.
The first work to call itself Gothic was Horace Walpole's 1764 novel The Castle of Otranto, later subtitled "A Gothic Story". Subsequent 18th-century contributors included Clara Reeve, Ann Radcliffe, William Thomas Beckford, and Matthew Lewis. The Gothic influence continued into the early 19th century; works by the Romantic poets, like Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Lord Byron, and novelists such as Mary Shelley, Charles Maturin, Walter Scott and E. T. A. Hoffmann frequently drew upon gothic motifs in their works.
The early Victorian period continued the use of gothic aesthetic in novels by Charles Dickens and the Brontë sisters, as well as works by the American writers Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel Hawthorne. Later well-known works were Dracula by Bram Stoker, Richard Marsh's The Beetle and Robert Louis Stevenson's Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. 20th-century contributors include Daphne du Maurier, Stephen King, Shirley Jackson, Anne Rice, and Toni Morrison.
Characteristics
Gothic fiction is characterized by an environment of fear, the threat of supernatural events, and the intrusion of the past upon the present. The setting typically includes physical reminders of the past, especially through ruined buildings which stand as proof of a previously thriving world which is decaying in the present. Characteristic settings in the 18th and 19th centuries include castles, religious buildings such as monasteries and convents, and crypts. The atmosphere is typically claustrophobic, and common plot elements include vengeful persecution, imprisonment, and murder. The depiction of horrible events in Gothic fiction often serves as a metaphorical expression of psychological or social conflicts. The form of a Gothic story is usually discontinuous and convoluted, often incorporating tales within tales, changing narrators, and framing devices such as discovered manuscripts or interpolated histories. Other characteristics, regardless of relevance to the main plot, can include sleeplike and deathlike states, live burials, doubles, unnatural echoes or silences, the discovery of obscured family ties, unintelligible writings, nocturnal landscapes, remote locations, and dreams. Especially in the late 19th century, Gothic fiction often involved demons and demonic possession, ghosts, and other kinds of evil spirits.
Gothic fiction often moves between "high culture" and "low" or "popular culture".
Role of architecture
Gothic literature is strongly associated with the Gothic Revival architecture of the same era. English Gothic writers often associated medieval buildings with what they saw as a dark and terrifying period, marked by harsh laws enforced by torture and with mysterious, fantastic, and superstitious rituals. Similar to the Gothic Revivalists' rejection of the clarity and rationalism of the Neoclassical style of the Enlightened Establishment, the literary Gothic embodies an appreciation of the joys of extreme emotion, the thrills of fearfulness and awe inherent in the sublime, and a quest for atmosphere. Gothic ruins invoke multiple linked emotions by representing inevitable decay and the collapse of human creations – hence the urge to add fake ruins as eyecatchers in English landscape parks.
Placing a story in a Gothic building serves several purposes. It inspires feelings of awe, implies that the story is set in the past, gives an impression of isolation or dissociation from the rest of the world, and conveys religious associations. Setting the novel in a Gothic castle was meant to imply a story set in the past and shrouded in darkness. The architecture often served as a mirror for the characters and events of the story. The buildings in The Castle of Otranto, for example, are riddled with tunnels that characters use to move back and forth in secret. This movement mirrors the secrets surrounding Manfred's possession of the castle and how it came into his family.
The Female Gothic
From the castles, dungeons, forests, and hidden passages of the Gothic novel genre emerged female Gothic. Guided by the works of authors such as Ann Radcliffe, Mary Shelley, and Charlotte Brontë, the female Gothic allowed women's societal and sexual desires to be introduced. In many respects, the novel's intended reader of the time was the woman who, even as she enjoyed such novels, felt she had to " down her book with affected indifference, or momentary shame," according to Jane Austen. The Gothic novel shaped its form for woman readers to "turn to Gothic romances to find support for their own mixed feelings."
Female Gothic narratives focus on such topics as a persecuted heroine fleeing from a villainous father and searching for an absent mother. At the same time, male writers tend towards the masculine transgression of social taboos. The emergence of the ghost story gave women writers something to write about besides the common marriage plot, allowing them to present a more radical critique of male power, violence, and predatory sexuality. Authors such as Mary Robinson and Charlotte Dacre however, present a counter to the naive and persecuted heroines usually featured in female Gothic of the time, and instead feature more sexually assertive heroines in their works.
When the female Gothic coincides with the explained supernatural, the natural cause of terror is not the supernatural, but female disability and societal horrors: rape, incest, and the threatening control of a male antagonist. Female Gothic novels also address women's discontent with patriarchal society, their difficult and unsatisfying maternal position, and their role within that society. Women's fears of entrapment in the domestic, their bodies, marriage, childbirth, or domestic abuse commonly appear in the genre.
After the characteristic Gothic Bildungsroman-like plot sequence, female Gothic allowed readers to grow from "adolescence to maturity" in the face of the realized impossibilities of the supernatural. As protagonists such as Adeline in The Romance of the Forest learn that their superstitious fantasies and terrors are replaced by natural cause and reasonable doubt, the reader may grasp the heroine's true position: "The heroine possesses the romantic temperament that perceives strangeness where others see none. Her sensibility, therefore, prevents her from knowing that her true plight is her condition, the disability of being female."
History
Precursors
— Lines from Shakespeare's Hamlet'Tis now the very witching time of night,
When churchyards yawn, and hell itself breathes out
Contagion to this world. Now could I drink hot blood,
And do such bitter business as the day
Would quake to look on.
The components that would eventually combine into Gothic literature had a rich history by the time Walpole presented a fictitious medieval manuscript in The Castle of Otranto in 1764.
The plays of William Shakespeare, in particular, were a crucial reference point for early Gothic writers, in both an effort to bring credibility to their works, and to legitimize the emerging genre as serious literature to the public. Tragedies such as Hamlet, Macbeth, King Lear, Romeo and Juliet, and Richard III, with plots revolving around the supernatural, revenge, murder, ghosts, witchcraft, and omens, written in dramatic pathos, and set in medieval castles, were a huge influence upon early Gothic authors, who frequently quote, and make allusions to Shakespeare's works.
John Milton's Paradise Lost (1667) was also very influential among Gothic writers, who were especially drawn to the tragic anti-hero character Satan, who became a model for many charismatic Gothic villains and Byronic heroes. Milton's "version of the myth of the fall and redemption, creation and decreation, is, as Frankenstein again reveals, an important model for Gothic plots."
Alexander Pope, who had a considerable influence on Walpole, was the first significant poet of the 18th century to write a poem in an authentic Gothic manner. Eloisa to Abelard (1717), a tale of star-crossed lovers, one doomed to a life of seclusion in a convent, and the other in a monastery, abounds in gloomy imagery, religious terror, and suppressed passion. The influence of Pope's poem is found throughout 18th-century Gothic literature, including the novels of Walpole, Radcliffe, and Lewis.
Gothic literature is often described with words such as "wonder" and "terror." This sense of wonder and terror that provides the suspension of disbelief so important to the Gothic—which, except for when it is parodied, even for all its occasional melodrama, is typically played straight, in a self-serious manner—requires the imagination of the reader to be willing to accept the idea that there might be something "beyond that which is immediately in front of us." The mysterious imagination necessary for Gothic literature to have gained any traction had been growing for some time before the advent of the Gothic. The need for this came as the known world was becoming more explored, reducing the geographical mysteries of the world. The edges of the map were filling in, and no dragons were to be found. The human mind required a replacement. Clive Bloom theorizes that this void in the collective imagination was critical in developing the cultural possibility for the rise of the Gothic tradition.
The setting of most early Gothic works was medieval, but this was a common theme long before Walpole. In Britain especially, there was a desire to reclaim a shared past. This obsession frequently led to extravagant architectural displays, such as Fonthill Abbey, and sometimes mock tournaments were held. It was not merely in literature that a medieval revival made itself felt, and this, too, contributed to a culture ready to accept a perceived medieval work in 1764.
The Gothic often uses scenery of decay, death, and morbidity to achieve its effects (especially in the Italian Horror school of Gothic). However, Gothic literature was not the origin of this tradition; it was far older. The corpses, skeletons, and churchyards so commonly associated with early Gothic works were popularized by the Graveyard poets. They were also present in novels such as Daniel Defoe's A Journal of the Plague Year, which contains comical scenes of plague carts and piles of corpses. Even earlier, poets like Edmund Spenser evoked a dreary and sorrowful mood in such poems as Epithalamion.
All aspects of pre-Gothic literature occur to some degree in the Gothic, but even taken together, they still fall short of true Gothic. What needed to be added was an aesthetic to tie the elements together. Bloom notes that this aesthetic must take the form of a theoretical or philosophical core, which is necessary to "sav the best tales from becoming mere anecdote or incoherent sensationalism." In this case, the aesthetic needed to be emotional, and was finally provided by Edmund Burke's 1757 work, A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful, which "finally codif the gothic emotional experience." Specifically, Burke's thoughts on the Sublime, Terror, and Obscurity were most applicable. These sections can be summarized thus: the Sublime is that which is or produces the "strongest emotion which the mind is capable of feeling"; Terror most often evoked the Sublime; and to cause Terror, we need some amount of Obscurity – we can't know everything about that which is inducing Terror – or else "a great deal of the apprehension vanishes"; Obscurity is necessary to experience the Terror of the unknown. Bloom asserts that Burke's descriptive vocabulary was essential to the Romantic works that eventually informed the Gothic.
The birth of Gothic literature was thought to have been influenced by political upheaval. Researchers linked its birth with the English Civil War, culminating in the Jacobite rising of 1745 which was more recent to the first Gothic novel (1764). The collective political memory and any deep cultural fears associated with it likely contributed to early Gothic villains as literary representatives of defeated Tory barons or Royalists "rising" from their political graves in the pages of early Gothic novels to terrorize the bourgeois reader of late eighteenth-century England.
Eighteenth-century Gothic novels
Main article: Eighteenth-century Gothic novelThe first work to call itself "Gothic" was Horace Walpole's The Castle of Otranto (1764). The first edition presented the story as a translation of a sixteenth-century manuscript and was widely popular. Walpole, in the second edition, revealed himself as the author which adding the subtitle "A Gothic Story." The revelation prompted a backlash from readers, who considered it inappropriate for a modern author to write a supernatural story in a rational age. Initiating a literary genre, Walpole's Gothic tale inspired many contemporary imitators, including Clara Reeve's The Old English Baron (1778), with Reeve writing in the preface: "This Story is the literary offspring of The Castle of Otranto". Like Reeve, the 1780s saw more writers attempting his combination of supernatural plots with emotionally realistic characters. Examples include Sophia Lee's The Recess (1783–5) and William Beckford's Vathek (1786).
At the height of the Gothic novel's popularity in the 1790s, the genre was almost synonymous with Ann Radcliffe, whose works were highly anticipated and widely imitated. The Romance of the Forest (1791) and The Mysteries of Udolpho (1794) were particularly popular. In an essay on Radcliffe, Walter Scott writes of the popularity of Udolpho at the time, "The very name was fascinating, and the public, who rushed upon it with all the eagerness of curiosity, rose from it with unsated appetite. When a family was numerous, the volumes flew, and were sometimes torn from hand to hand." Radcliffe's novels were often seen as the feminine and rational opposite of a more violently horrifying male Gothic associated with Matthew Lewis. Radcliffe's final novel, The Italian (1797), responded to Lewis's The Monk (1796). Radcliffe and Lewis have been called "the two most significant Gothic novelists of the 1790s."
The popularity and influence of The Mysteries of Udolpho and The Monk saw the rise of shorter and cheaper versions of Gothic literature in the forms of Gothic bluebooks and chapbooks, which in many cases were plagiarized and abridgments of well known Gothic novels. The Monk in particular, with its immoral and sensational content, saw many plagiarized copies, and was notably drawn from in the cheaper pamphlets.
Other notable Gothic novels of the 1790s include William Godwin's Caleb Williams (1794), Regina Maria Roche's Clermont (1798), and Charles Brockden Brown's Wieland (1798), as well as large numbers of anonymous works published by the Minerva Press established by William Lane at Leadenhall Street, London in 1790. In continental Europe, Romantic literary movements led to related Gothic genres such as the German Schauerroman and the French Roman noir. Eighteenth-century Gothic novels were typically set in a distant past and (for English novels) a distant European country, but without specific dates or historical figures that characterized the later development of historical fiction.
The saturation of Gothic-inspired literature during the 1790s was referred to in a letter by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, writing on 16 March 1797, "indeed I am almost weary of the Terrible, having been a hireling in the Critical Review for the last six or eight months – I have been reviewing the Monk, the Italian, Hubert de Sevrac &c &c &c – in all of which dungeons, and old castles, & solitary Houses by the Sea Side & Caverns & Woods & extraordinary characters & all the tribe of Horror & Mystery, have crowded on me – even to surfeiting."
The excesses, stereotypes, and frequent absurdities of the Gothic genre made it rich territory for satire. Historian Rictor Norton notes that satire of Gothic literature was common from 1796 until the 1820s, including early satirical works such as The New Monk (1798), More Ghosts! (1798) and Rosella, or Modern Occurrences (1799). Gothic novels themselves, according to Norton, also possess elements of self-satire, "By having profane comic characters as well as sacred serious characters, the Gothic novelist could puncture the balloon of the supernatural while at the same time affirming the power of the imagination." After 1800 there was a period in which Gothic parodies outnumbered forthcoming Gothic novels. In The Heroine by Eaton Stannard Barrett (1813), Gothic tropes are exaggerated for comic effect. In Jane Austen's novel Northanger Abbey (1818), the naive protagonist, a female named Catherine, conceives herself as a heroine of a Radcliffean romance and imagines murder and villainy on every side. However, the truth turns out to be much more prosaic. This novel is also noted for including a list of early Gothic works known as the Northanger Horrid Novels.
Second generation or Jüngere Romantik
The poetry, romantic adventures, and character of Lord Byron—characterized by his spurned lover Lady Caroline Lamb as "mad, bad and dangerous to know"—were another inspiration for the Gothic novel, providing the archetype of the Byronic hero. For example, Byron is the title character in Lady Caroline's Gothic novel Glenarvon (1816).
Byron was also the host of the celebrated ghost-story competition involving himself, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Mary Shelley, and John William Polidori at the Villa Diodati on the banks of Lake Geneva in the summer of 1816. This occasion was productive of both Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, or, The Modern Prometheus (1818), and Polidori's short story "The Vampyre" (1819), featuring the Byronic Lord Ruthven. "The Vampyre" has been accounted by cultural critic Christopher Frayling as one of the most influential works of fiction ever written and spawned a craze for vampire fiction and theatre (and, latterly, film) that has not ceased to this day. Although clearly influenced by the Gothic tradition, Mary Shelley's novel is often considered the first science fiction novel, despite the novel's lack of any scientific explanation for the animation of Frankenstein's monster and the focus instead on the moral dilemmas and consequences of such a creation.
John Keats' La Belle Dame sans Merci (1819) and Isabella, or the Pot of Basil (1820) feature mysteriously fey ladies. In the latter poem, the names of the characters, the dream visions, and the macabre physical details are influenced by the novels of premiere Gothicist Ann Radcliffe.
Although ushering in the historical novel, and turning popularity away from Gothic fiction, Walter Scott frequently employed Gothic elements in his novels and poetry. Scott drew upon oral folklore, fireside tales, and ancient superstitions, often juxtaposing rationality and the supernatural. Novels such as The Bride of Lammermoor (1819), in which the characters' fates are decided by superstition and prophecy, or the poem Marmion (1808), in which a nun is walled alive inside a convent, illustrate Scott's influence and use of Gothic themes.
A late example of a traditional Gothic novel is Melmoth the Wanderer (1820) by Charles Maturin, which combines themes of anti-Catholicism with an outcast Byronic hero. Jane C. Loudon's The Mummy! (1827) features standard Gothic motifs, characters, and plot, but with one significant twist; it is set in the twenty-second century and speculates on fantastic scientific developments that might have occurred three hundred years in the future, making it and Frankenstein among the earliest examples of the science fiction genre developing from Gothic traditions.
During two decades, the most famous author of Gothic literature in Germany was the polymath E. T. A. Hoffmann. Lewis's The Monk influenced and even mentioned it in his novel The Devil's Elixirs (1815). The novel explores the motive of Doppelgänger, a term coined by another German author and supporter of Hoffmann, Jean-Paul, in his humorous novel Siebenkäs (1796–1797). He also wrote an opera based on Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué's Gothic story Undine (1816), for which de la Motte Fouqué wrote the libretto. Aside from Hoffmann and de la Motte Fouqué, three other important authors from the era were Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff (The Marble Statue, 1818), Ludwig Achim von Arnim (Die Majoratsherren, 1819), and Adelbert von Chamisso (Peter Schlemihls wundersame Geschichte, 1814). After them, Wilhelm Meinhold wrote The Amber Witch (1838) and Sidonia von Bork (1847).
In Spain, the priest Pascual Pérez Rodríguez was the most diligent novelist in the Gothic way, closely aligned to the supernatural explained by Ann Radcliffe. At the same time, the poet José de Espronceda published The Student of Salamanca (1837–1840), a narrative poem that presents a horrid variation on the Don Juan legend.
In Russia, authors of the Romantic era include Antony Pogorelsky (penname of Alexey Alexeyevich Perovsky), Orest Somov, Oleksa Storozhenko, Alexandr Pushkin, Nikolai Alekseevich Polevoy, Mikhail Lermontov (for his work Stuss), and Alexander Bestuzhev-Marlinsky. Pushkin is particularly important, as his 1833 short story The Queen of Spades was so popular that it was adapted into operas and later films by Russian and foreign artists. Some parts of Mikhail Yuryevich Lermontov's A Hero of Our Time (1840) are also considered to belong to the Gothic genre, but they lack the supernatural elements of other Russian Gothic stories.
The following poems are also now considered to belong to the Gothic genre: Meshchevskiy's "Lila", Katenin's "Olga", Pushkin's "The Bridegroom", Pletnev's "The Gravedigger" and Lermontov's Demon (1829–1839).
The key author of the transition from Romanticism to Realism, Nikolai Vasilievich Gogol, who was also one of the most important authors of Romanticism, produced a number of works that qualify as Gothic fiction. Each of his three short story collections features a number of stories that fall within the Gothic genre or contain Gothic elements. They include "Saint John's Eve" and "A Terrible Vengeance" from Evenings on a Farm Near Dikanka (1831–1832), "The Portrait" from Arabesques (1835), and "Viy" from Mirgorod (1835). While all are well known, the latter is probably the most famous, having inspired at least eight film adaptations (two now considered lost), one animated film, two documentaries, and a video game. Gogol's work differs from Western European Gothic fiction, as his cultural influences drew on Ukrainian folklore, the Cossack lifestyle, and, as a religious man, Orthodox Christianity.
Other relevant authors of this era include Vladimir Fyodorovich Odoevsky (The Living Corpse, written 1838, published 1844, The Ghost, The Sylphide, as well as short stories), Count Aleksey Konstantinovich Tolstoy (The Family of the Vourdalak, 1839, and The Vampire, 1841), Mikhail Zagoskin (Unexpected Guests), Józef Sękowski/Osip Senkovsky (Antar), and Yevgeny Baratynsky (The Ring).
Nineteenth-century Gothic fiction
See also: Penny dreadful and American Gothic fictionBy the Victorian era, Gothic had ceased to be the dominant genre for novels in England, partly replaced by more sedate historical fiction. However, Gothic short stories continued to be popular, published in magazines or as small chapbooks called penny dreadfuls. The most influential Gothic writer from this period was the American Edgar Allan Poe, who wrote numerous short stories and poems reinterpreting Gothic tropes. His story "The Fall of the House of Usher" (1839) revisits classic Gothic tropes of aristocratic decay, death, and insanity. Poe is now considered the master of the American Gothic.
In England, one of the most influential penny dreadfuls is the anonymously authored Varney the Vampire (1847), which introduced the trope of vampires having sharpened teeth. Another notable English author of penny dreadfuls is George W. M. Reynolds, known for The Mysteries of London (1844), Faust (1846), Wagner the Wehr-wolf (1847), and The Necromancer (1857). Elizabeth Gaskell's tales "The Doom of the Griffiths" (1858), "Lois the Witch", and "The Grey Woman" all employ one of the most common themes of Gothic fiction: the power of ancestral sins to curse future generations, or the fear that they will. M. R. James, an English medievalist whose stories are still popular today, is known as the originator of the "antiquarian ghost story." In Spain, Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer stood out with his romantic poems and short tales, some depicting supernatural events. Today some consider him the most-read Spanish writer after Miguel de Cervantes.
In addition to these short Gothic fictions, some novels drew on the Gothic. Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights (1847) transports the Gothic to the forbidding Yorkshire Moors and features ghostly apparitions and a Byronic hero in the person of the demonic Heathcliff. The Brontës' fictions were cited by feminist critic Ellen Moers as prime examples of Female Gothic, exploring woman's entrapment within domestic space and subjection to patriarchal authority and the transgressive and dangerous attempts to subvert and escape such restriction. Emily Brontë's Cathy and Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre are examples of female protagonists in such roles. Louisa May Alcott's Gothic potboiler, A Long Fatal Love Chase (written in 1866 but published in 1995), is also an interesting specimen of this subgenre. Charlotte Brontë's Villette also shows the Gothic influence, with its supernatural subplot featuring a ghostly nun, and its view of Roman Catholicism as exotic and heathenistic. Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel The House of the Seven Gables, about a family's ancestral home, is colored with suggestions of the supernatural and witchcraft; and in true Gothic fashion, it features the house itself as one of the main characters,
The genre also heavily influenced writers such as Charles Dickens, who read Gothic novels as a teenager and incorporated their gloomy atmosphere and melodrama into his works, shifting them to a more modern period and an urban setting; for example, in Oliver Twist (1837–1838), Bleak House (1854) and Great Expectations (1860–1861). These works juxtapose wealthy, ordered, and affluent civilization with the disorder and barbarity of the poor in the same metropolis. Bleak House, in particular, is credited with introducing urban fog to the novel, which would become a frequent characteristic of urban Gothic literature and film. Miss Havisham from Great Expectations, is one of Dickens' most Gothic characters. The bitter recluse shuts herself away in her gloomy mansion ever since being jilted at the altar on her wedding day. His most explicitly Gothic work is his last novel, The Mystery of Edwin Drood, which he did not live to complete and was published unfinished upon his death in 1870. The mood and themes of the Gothic novel held a particular fascination for the Victorians, with their obsession with mourning rituals, mementos, and mortality in general.
Irish Catholics also wrote Gothic fiction in the 19th century. Although some Anglo-Irish dominated and defined the subgenre decades later, they did not own it. Irish Catholic Gothic writers included Gerald Griffin, James Clarence Mangan, and John and Michael Banim. William Carleton was a notable Gothic writer, and converted from Catholicism to Anglicanism.
In Switzerland, Jeremias Gotthelf wrote The Black Spider (1842), an allegorical work that uses Gothic themes. The last work from the German writer Theodor Storm, The Rider on the White Horse (1888), also uses Gothic motives and themes.
After Gogol, Russian literature saw the rise of Realism, but many authors continued to write stories within Gothic fiction territory. Ivan Sergeyevich Turgenev, one of the most celebrated Realists, wrote Faust (1856), Phantoms (1864), Song of the Triumphant Love (1881), and Clara Milich (1883). Another classic Russian Realist, Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoyevsky, incorporated Gothic elements into many of his works, although none can be seen as purely Gothic. Grigory Petrovich Danilevsky, who wrote historical and early science fiction novels and stories, wrote Mertvec-ubiytsa (Dead Murderer) in 1879. Also, Grigori Alexandrovich Machtet wrote "Zaklyatiy kazak", which may now also be considered Gothic.
The 1880s saw the revival of the Gothic as a powerful literary form allied to fin de siecle, which fictionalized contemporary fears like ethical degeneration and questioned the social structures of the time. Classic works of this Urban Gothic include Robert Louis Stevenson's Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1886), Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray (1891), George du Maurier's Trilby (1894), Richard Marsh's The Beetle (1897), Henry James' The Turn of the Screw (1898), and the stories of Arthur Machen.
In Ireland, Gothic fiction tended to be purveyed by the Anglo-Irish Protestant Ascendancy. According to literary critic Terry Eagleton, Charles Maturin, Sheridan Le Fanu, and Bram Stoker form the core of the Irish Gothic subgenre with stories featuring castles set in a barren landscape and a cast of remote aristocrats dominating an atavistic peasantry, which represent an allegorical form the political plight of Catholic Ireland subjected to the Protestant Ascendancy. Le Fanu's use of the gloomy villain, forbidding mansion, and persecuted heroine in Uncle Silas (1864) shows direct influence from Walpole's Otranto and Radcliffe's Udolpho. Le Fanu's short story collection In a Glass Darkly (1872) includes the superlative vampire tale Carmilla, which provided fresh blood for that particular strand of the Gothic and influenced Bram Stoker's vampire novel Dracula (1897). Stoker's book created the most famous Gothic villain ever, Count Dracula, and established Transylvania and Eastern Europe as the locus classicus of the Gothic. Published in the same year as Dracula, Florence Marryat's The Blood of the Vampire is another piece of vampire fiction. The Blood of the Vampire, which, like Carmilla, features a female vampire, is notable for its treatment of vampirism as both racial and medicalized. The vampire, Harriet Brandt, is also a psychic vampire, killing unintentionally.
In the United States, notable late 19th-century writers in the Gothic tradition were Ambrose Bierce, Robert W. Chambers, and Edith Wharton. Bierce's short stories were in the horrific and pessimistic tradition of Poe. Chambers indulged in the decadent style of Wilde and Machen, even including a character named Wilde in his The King in Yellow (1895). Wharton published some notable Gothic ghost stories. Some works of the Canadian writer Gilbert Parker also fall into the genre, including the stories in The Lane that had No Turning (1900).
The serialized novel The Phantom of the Opera (1909–1910) by the French writer Gaston Leroux is another well-known example of Gothic fiction from the early 20th century, when many German authors were writing works influenced by Schauerroman, including Hanns Heinz Ewers.
Russian Gothic
Until the 1990s, Russian Gothic critics did not view Russian Gothic as a genre or label. If used, the word "gothic" was used to describe (mostly early) works of Fyodor Dostoyevsky from the 1880s. Most critics used tags such as "Romanticism" and "fantastique", such as in the 1984 story collection translated into English as Russian 19th-Century Gothic Tales but originally titled Фантастический мир русской романтической повести, literally, "The Fantastic World of Russian Romanticism Short Story/Novella." However, since the mid-1980s, Russian gothic fiction as a genre began to be discussed in books such as The Gothic-Fantastic in Nineteenth-Century Russian Literature, European Gothic: A Spirited Exchange 1760–1960, The Russian Gothic Novel and its British Antecedents and Goticheskiy roman v Rossii (The Gothic Novel in Russia).
The first Russian author whose work has been described as gothic fiction is considered to be Nikolay Mikhailovich Karamzin. While many of his works feature gothic elements, the first to belong purely under the gothic fiction label is Ostrov Borngolm (Island of Bornholm) from 1793. Nearly ten years later, Nikolay Ivanovich Gnedich followed suit with his 1803 novel Don Corrado de Gerrera, set in Spain during the reign of Philip II. The term "Gothic" is sometimes also used to describe the ballads of Russian authors such as Vasily Andreyevich Zhukovsky, particularly "Ludmila" (1808) and "Svetlana" (1813), both translations based on Gottfreid August Burger's Gothic German ballad, "Lenore".
During the last years of Imperial Russia in the early 20th century, many authors continued to write in the Gothic fiction genre. They include the historian and historical fiction writer Alexander Valentinovich Amfiteatrov and Leonid Nikolaievich Andreyev, who developed psychological characterization; the symbolist Valery Yakovlevich Bryusov, Alexander Grin, Anton Pavlovich Chekhov; and Aleksandr Ivanovich Kuprin. Nobel Prize winner Ivan Alekseyevich Bunin wrote Dry Valley (1912), which is seen as influenced by Gothic literature. In a monograph on the subject, Muireann Maguire writes, "The centrality of the Gothic-fantastic to Russian fiction is almost impossible to exaggerate, and certainly exceptional in the context of world literature."
Twentienth-century Gothic fiction
See also: Pulp magazineGothic fiction and Modernism influenced each other. This is often evident in detective fiction, horror fiction, and science fiction, but the influence of the Gothic can also be seen in the high literary Modernism of the 20th century. Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray (1890) initiated a re-working of older literary forms and myths that became common in the work of W. B. Yeats, T. S. Eliot, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, Shirley Jackson, and Angela Carter, among others. In Joyce's Ulysses (1922), the living are transformed into ghosts, which points to an Ireland in stasis at the time and a history of cyclical trauma from the Great Famine in the 1840s through to the current moment in the text. The way Ulysses uses Gothic tropes such as ghosts and hauntings while removing the supernatural elements of 19th-century Gothic fiction indicates a general form of modernist Gothic writing in the first half of the 20th century.
In America, pulp magazines such as Weird Tales reprinted classic Gothic horror tales from the previous century by authors like Poe, Arthur Conan Doyle, and Edward Bulwer-Lytton, and printed new stories by modern authors featuring both traditional and new horrors. The most significant of these was H. P. Lovecraft, who also wrote a conspectus of the Gothic and supernatural horror tradition in his Supernatural Horror in Literature (1936), and developed a Mythos that would influence Gothic and contemporary horror well into the 21st century. Lovecraft's protégé, Robert Bloch, contributed to Weird Tales and penned Psycho (1959), which drew on the classic interests of the genre. From these, the Gothic genre per se gave way to modern horror fiction, regarded by some literary critics as a branch of the Gothic, although others use the term to cover the entire genre.
The Romantic strand of Gothic was taken up in Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca (1938), which is seen by some to have been influenced by Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre. Other books by du Maurier, such as Jamaica Inn (1936), also display Gothic tendencies. Du Maurier's work inspired a substantial body of "female Gothics," concerning heroines alternately swooning over or terrified by scowling Byronic men in possession of acres of prime real estate and the appertaining droit du seigneur.
Southern Gothic
Main article: Southern GothicThe genre also influenced American writing, creating a Southern Gothic genre that combines some Gothic sensibilities, such as the grotesque, with the setting and style of the Southern United States. Examples include Erskine Caldwell, William Faulkner, Carson McCullers, John Kennedy Toole, Manly Wade Wellman, Eudora Welty, V. C. Andrews, Tennessee Williams, Truman Capote, Flannery O'Connor, Davis Grubb, Anne Rice, Harper Lee, and Cormac McCarthy.
New Gothic romances
Mass-produced Gothic romances became popular in the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s with authors such as Phyllis A. Whitney, Joan Aiken, Dorothy Eden, Victoria Holt, Barbara Michaels, Mary Stewart, Alicen White, and Jill Tattersall. Many featured covers show a terror-stricken woman in diaphanous attire in front of a gloomy castle, often with a single-lit window. Many were published under the Paperback Library Gothic imprint and marketed to female readers. While the authors were mostly women, some men wrote Gothic romances under female pseudonyms: the prolific Clarissa Ross and Marilyn Ross were pseudonyms of the male Dan Ross; Frank Belknap Long published Gothics under his wife's name, Lyda Belknap Long; the British writer Peter O'Donnell wrote under the pseudonym Madeleine Brent. After the gothic romance boom faded away in the early 1990s, very few publishers embraced the term for mass market romance paperbacks apart from imprints like Love Spell, which was discontinued in 2010. However, in recent years the term "Gothic Romance" is being used to describe both old and new works of Gothic fiction.
Contemporary Gothic
For modern horror associated with the goth scene, see Goth subculture § Books and magazines.Gothic fiction continues to be extensively practised by contemporary authors. Many modern writers of horror or other types of fiction exhibit considerable Gothic sensibilities – examples include Anne Rice, Susan Hill, Ray Russell, Billy Martin, Silvia Moreno-Garcia, Carmen Maria Machado, Neil Gaiman, and Stephen King. Thomas M. Disch's novel The Priest (1994) was subtitled A Gothic Romance and partly modeled on Matthew Lewis' The Monk. Many writers such as Billy Martin, Stephen King, Brett Easton Ellis, and Clive Barker have focused on the body's surface and blood's visuality. England's Rhiannon Ward is among the recent writers of Gothic fiction. Catriona Ward won a British Fantasy Award for Best Horror Novel for her gothic novel Rawblood in 2016.
Contemporary American writers in the tradition include Joyce Carol Oates with such novels as Bellefleur and A Bloodsmoor Romance, Toni Morrison with her radical novel Beloved, about a slave-woman whose murdered baby haunts her, Raymond Kennedy with his novel Lulu Incognito, Donna Tartt with her postmodern gothic horror novel The Secret History, Ursula Vernon with her Edgar Allan Poe-inspired novel What Moves the Dead, Danielle Trussoni with her "gothic extravaganza" The Ancestor, and filmmaker Anna Biller with Bluebeard's Castle, a throwback to 18th-century Gothic novels and 1960s dime-store romances. British writers who have continued in the Gothic tradition include Sarah Waters with her haunted house novel The Little Stranger, Diane Setterfield with her quintessentially Gothic novels The Thirteenth Tale and Once Upon a River, Helen Oyeyemi with her experimental novel White is for Witching, Sarah Perry with her novels Melmoth and The Essex Serpent, and Laura Purcell with her historical novels The Silent Companions and The Shape of Darkness.
Several Gothic traditions have also developed in New Zealand (with the subgenre referred to as New Zealand Gothic or Maori Gothic) and Australia (known as Australian Gothic). These explore everything from the multicultural natures of the two countries to their natural geography. Novels in the Australian Gothic tradition include Kate Grenville's The Secret River and the works of Kim Scott. An even smaller genre is Tasmanian Gothic, set exclusively on the island, with prominent examples including Gould's Book of Fish by Richard Flanagan and The Roving Party by Rohan Wilson. Another Australian author, Kate Morton, has penned several homages to classic gothic fiction, among them The Distant Hours and The House at Riverton.
Southern Ontario Gothic applies a similar sensibility to a Canadian cultural context. Robertson Davies, Alice Munro, Barbara Gowdy, Timothy Findley, and Margaret Atwood have all produced notable exemplars of this form. Another writer in the tradition was Henry Farrell, best known for his 1960 Hollywood horror novel What Ever Happened To Baby Jane? Farrell's novels spawned a subgenre of "Grande Dame Guignol" in the cinema, represented by such films as the 1962 film based on Farrell's novel, which starred Bette Davis versus Joan Crawford; this subgenre of films was dubbed the "psycho-biddy" genre.
Outside the English-speaking world, Latin American Gothic literature has been gaining momentum since the first decades of the 21st century. Some of the main authors whose style has been described as Gothic are María Fernanda Ampuero, Mariana Enríquez, Fernanda Melchor, Mónica Ojeda, Giovanna Rivero, and Samanta Schweblin.
The many Gothic subgenres include a new "environmental Gothic" or "ecoGothic". It is an ecologically aware Gothic engaged in "dark nature" and "ecophobia." Writers and critics of the ecoGothic suggest that the Gothic genre is uniquely positioned to speak to anxieties about climate change and the planet's ecological future.
Among the bestselling books of the 21st century, the YA novel Twilight by Stephenie Meyer is now increasingly identified as a Gothic novel, as is Carlos Ruiz Zafón's 2001 novel The Shadow of the Wind.
Other media
Literary Gothic themes have been translated into other media. There was a notable revival in 20th-century Gothic horror cinema, such as the classic Universal Monsters films of the 1930s, Hammer Horror films, and Roger Corman's Poe cycle. In Hindi cinema, the Gothic tradition was combined with aspects of Indian culture, particularly reincarnation, for an "Indian Gothic" genre, beginning with Mahal (1949) and Madhumati (1958). The 1960s Gothic television series Dark Shadows borrowed liberally from Gothic traditions, with elements like haunted mansions, vampires, witches, doomed romances, werewolves, obsession, and madness. The early 1970s saw a Gothic Romance comic book mini-trend with such titles as DC Comics' The Dark Mansion of Forbidden Love and The Sinister House of Secret Love, Charlton Comics' Haunted Love, Curtis Magazines' Gothic Tales of Love, and Atlas/Seaboard Comics' one-shot magazine Gothic Romances.
Twentieth-century rock music also had its Gothic side. Black Sabbath's 1970 debut album created a dark sound different from other bands at the time and has been called the first-ever "goth-rock" record. However, the first recorded use of "gothic" to describe a style of music was for The Doors. Critic John Stickney used the term "gothic rock" to describe the music of The Doors in October 1967 in a review published in The Williams Record. Other forerunners who initially shaped the aesthetics and musical conventions of gothic rock include Marc Bolan, the Velvet Underground, David Bowie, Brian Eno, and Iggy Pop. Critic Simon Reynolds retrospectively described Kate Bush's 1978 song "Wuthering Heights"—with its lyrics inspired by Emily Brontë's 1847 novel Wuthering Heights featuring Cathy as a ghost and the tortured anti-hero Heathcliff—as "Gothic romance distilled into four-and-a-half minutes of gaseous rhapsody". Gothic rock as a music genre emerged in late 1970s England, with Bauhaus's debut single, "Bela Lugosi's Dead", released in late 1979, retrospectively considered to be the beginning of the genre. This was followed by the album Unknown Pleasures by Joy Division a year later, and in the early 1980s, post-punk bands such as the Cure and Siouxsie and the Banshees included more gothic characteristics in their music. Tracing the genre from its 18th-century literary roots through its flourishing as a music subculture from the late 1970s onward, the Cure's Lol Tolhurst wrote, "Goth is about being in love with the melancholy beauty of existence". Themes from Gothic writers such as H. P. Lovecraft were used among Gothic rock and heavy metal bands, especially in black metal, thrash metal (Metallica's The Call of Ktulu), death metal, and gothic metal. For example, in his compositions, heavy metal musician King Diamond delights in telling stories full of horror, theatricality, Satanism, and anti-Catholicism.
In role-playing games (RPG), the pioneering 1983 Dungeons & Dragons adventure Ravenloft instructs the players to defeat the vampire Strahd von Zarovich, who pines for his dead lover. It has been acclaimed as one of the best role-playing adventures ever and even inspired an entire fictional world of the same name. The World of Darkness is a gothic-punk RPG line set in the real world, with the added element of supernatural creatures such as werewolves and vampires. In addition to its flagship title Vampire: The Masquerade, the game line features a number of spin-off RPGs such as Werewolf: The Apocalypse, Mage: The Ascension, Wraith: The Oblivion, Hunter: The Reckoning, and Changeling: The Dreaming, allowing for a wide range of characters in the gothic-punk setting. My Life with Master uses Gothic horror conventions as a metaphor for abusive relationships, placing the players in the shoes of minions of a tyrannical, larger-than-life Master.
Various video games feature Gothic horror themes and plots. The Castlevania series typically involves a hero of the Belmont lineage exploring a dark, old castle, fighting vampires, werewolves, Frankenstein's Creature, and other Gothic monster staples, culminating in a battle against Dracula himself. Others, such as Ghosts 'n Goblins, feature a camper parody of Gothic fiction. 2017's Resident Evil 7: Biohazard, a Southern Gothic reboot to the survival horror video game involves an everyman and his wife trapped in a derelict plantation and mansion owned by a family with sinister and hideous secrets and must face terrifying visions of a ghostly mutant in the shape of a little girl. This was followed by 2021's Resident Evil Village, a Gothic horror sequel focusing on an action hero searching for his kidnapped daughter in a mysterious Eastern European village under the control of a bizarre religious cult inhabited by werewolves, vampires, ghosts, shapeshifters, and other monsters. The Devil May Cry series stands as an equally parodic and self-serious franchise, following the escapades, stunts and mishaps of series protagonist Dante as he explores dingy demonic castles, ancient occult monuments and ruined urban landscapes on his quest to avenge his mother and brother. Gothic literary themes appear all throughout the story, such as how the past physically creeps into the ambiguously modern setting, recurrent imagery of doubles (notably regarding Dante and his twin brother), and the persisting melodramas associated with Dante's father's fame, absence, and demonic heritage. Beginning with Devil May Cry 3: Dante's Awakening, Female Gothic elements enter the series as deuteragonist Lady works through her own revenge plot against her murderous father, with the oppressive and consistent emotional and physical abuse instigated by a patriarchal figure serving as a heavy, understated counterweight to the extravagance of the rest of the story. Finally, Bloodborne takes place in the decaying Gothic city of Yharnam, where the player must face werewolves, shambling mutants, vampires, witches, and numerous other Gothic staple creatures. However, the game takes a marked turn midway shifting from gothic to Lovecraftian horror.
Popular tabletop card game Magic: The Gathering, known for its parallel universe consisting of "planes," features the plane known as Innistrad. Its general aesthetic is based on northeast European Gothic horror. Innistard's common residents include cultists, ghosts, vampires, werewolves, and zombies.
Film director Tim Burton, whose influences include Universal Monsters movies such as Frankenstein, Hammer Horror films starring Christopher Lee and the horror films of Vincent Price, is known for creating a gothic aesthetic in his films. Modern Gothic horror films include Sleepy Hollow, Interview with the Vampire, Underworld, The Wolfman, From Hell, Dorian Gray, Let the Right One In, The Woman in Black, Crimson Peak, The Little Stranger, and The Love Witch.
The TV series Penny Dreadful (2014–2016) brings many classic Gothic characters together in a psychological thriller set in the dark corners of Victorian London. The Oscar-winning Korean film Parasite has also been called Gothic – specifically, Revolutionary Gothic. Recently, the Netflix original The Haunting of Hill House and its successor The Haunting of Bly Manor have integrated classic Gothic conventions into modern psychological horror.
Scholarship
Educators in literary, cultural, and architectural studies appreciate the Gothic as an area that facilitates investigation of the beginnings of scientific certainty. As Carol Senf has stated, "the Gothic was... a counterbalance produced by writers and thinkers who felt limited by such a confident worldview and recognized that the power of the past, the irrational, and the violent continue to sway in the world." As such, the Gothic helps students better understand their doubts about the self-assurance of today's scientists. Scotland is the location of what was probably the world's first postgraduate program to consider the genre exclusively: the MLitt in the Gothic Imagination at the University of Stirling, first recruited in 1996.
See also
- Aestheticism
- American Gothic fiction
- Decadent Movement
- Dark fantasy
- Eighteenth-century Gothic novel
- French Revolution and the English Gothic Novel
- Gaslamp fantasy
- Gothic film
- Gothic romance film
- Gothic Western
- Irish Gothic literature
- Latin American Gothic
- List of gothic fiction works
- List of Minerva Press authors
- Minerva Press
- Southern Gothic
- Southern Ontario Gothic
- Suburban Gothic
- Symbolism (arts)
- Tasmanian Gothic
- Urban Gothic
- Weird fiction
- Goth music
- Goth subculture
Notes
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- ^ Hogle, Jerrold E., ed. (29 August 2002). "Introduction". The Cambridge Companion to Gothic Fiction. Cambridge Companions to Literature (1 ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 1–20. doi:10.1017/ccol0521791243. ISBN 978-0-521-79124-3.
- De Vore, David. "The Gothic Novel". Archived from the original on 13 March 2011.
The setting is greatly influential in Gothic novels. It not only evokes the atmosphere of horror and dread, but also portrays the deterioration of its world. The decaying, ruined scenery implies that at one time there was a thriving world. At one time the abbey, castle, or landscape was something treasured and appreciated. Now, all that lasts is the decaying shell of a once thriving dwelling.
- ^ Kosofsky Sedgwick, Eve (1980). "The Coherence of Gothic Conventions" (PDF). Methuen. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
- ^ Davies, David Stuart; Forshaw, Barry, eds. (2015). The Sherlock Holmes Book (First American ed.). New York: DK. pp. 99–100. ISBN 978-1-4654-3849-2.
- Luckhurst, Roger (2021). GOTHIC An Illustrated History. Thames & Hudson. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-500-25251-2.
- Bayer-Berenbaum, L. 1982. The Gothic Imagination: Expansion in Gothic Literature and Art. Rutherford: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press.
- Walpole, H. 1764 (1968). The Castle of Otranto. Reprinted in Three Gothic Novels. London: Penguin Press.
- "Austen's Northanger Abbey", Second Edition, Broadview, 2002.
- Ronald, Ann, "Terror Gothic: Nightmare and Dream in Ann Radcliffe and Charlotte Bronte", in Juliann E. Fleenor (ed.) The Female Gothic, Montreal: Eden Press Inc., 1983, pp. 176–186.
- Smith, Andrew, and Diana Wallace, "The Female Gothic: Then and Now." Gothic Studies, 25 August 2004, pp. 1–7.
- Hirst, Sam (14 May 2021). "The Real Life Heroines of the Early Gothic". Reactor. Retrieved 22 June 2024.
- ^ Nichols, Nina da Vinci, "Place and Eros in Radcliffe, Lewis and Bronte", in Juliann E. Fleenor (ed.), The Female Gothic: An Introduction, Montreal: Eden Press Inc., 1983, pp. 187–206.
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- Bloom, Clive (2010). Gothic Histories: The Taste for Terror, 1764 to Present. London: Continuum International Publishing Group. p. 8.
- "Early and Pre-Gothic Literary Conventions & Examples". Spooky Scary Skeletons Literary and Horror Society. Spooky Scary Society. 31 October 2016. Retrieved 26 March 2016.
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- ^ Sucur, Slobodan (6 May 2007). "Gothic fiction". The Literary Encyclopedia. ISSN 1747-678X.
- Scott, Walter (1825). "Lives of the Novelists". Carey & Lea. p. 195.
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- ^ Skarda and Jaffe (1981), pp. 33–35 and 132–133.
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- Rose Miller, Emma (2019). "Fact, Fiction or Fantasy, Scott's Historical Project and The Bride of Lammermoor" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 21 May 2022. Retrieved 1 May 2022.
- Joe Walker, Grady (1957). "Scott's Refinement of The Gothic In Certain of The Waverley Novels" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 21 May 2022. Retrieved 4 May 2022.
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- Hogle, p. 105–122.
- Cusack, Barry, p. 91, pp. 118–123.
- Aldana, Xavier, pp. 10–17
- Krys Svitlana, "Folklorism in Ukrainian Gotho-Romantic Prose: Oleksa Storozhenko's Tale About Devil in Love (1861)." Folklorica: Journal of the Slavic and East European Folklore Association, 16 (2011), pp. 117–138.
- ^ Horner (2002). Neil Cornwell: European Gothic and the 19th-century Gothic literature, pp. 59–82.
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- Simpson, c. p. 21.
- Cornwell (1999). Neil Cornwell, pp. 189–234.
- (Skarda and Jaffe (1981) pp. 181–182.
- "Did Vampires Not Have Fangs in Movies Until the 1950s?". Huffington Post. Retrieved 27 September 2017.
- Baddeley (2002) pp. 143–144.)
- "Bécquer es el escritor más leído después de Cervantes". La Provincia. Diario de las Palmas (in Spanish). 28 July 2011. Retrieved 22 February 2018.
- Moers, Ellen (1976). Literary Women. Doubleday. ISBN 9780385074278.
- Jackson (1981) pp. 123–129.
- Johnson, E. D. H. (1966). ""Daring the Dread Glance": Charlotte Brontë's Treatment of the Supernatural in Villette". Nineteenth-Century Fiction. 20 (4): 325–336. doi:10.2307/2932664. JSTOR 2932664.
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- Mighall, 2007.
- "The Gothic in Great Expectations". British Library. Archived from the original on 31 July 2023. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
- "Edwin Drood: Charles Dickens's last mystery finally solved?". BBC. Retrieved 25 July 2024.
Dealing with the story of drug-addicted choirmaster John Jasper, The Mystery of Edwin Drood is a "dark and gothic" tale which is "very spooky, scary and modern"
- Killeen, Jarlath (31 January 2014). The Emergence of Irish Gothic Fiction. Edinburgh University Press. p. 51. doi:10.3366/edinburgh/9780748690800.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-7486-9080-0. S2CID 192770214.
- Cusack, Barry, p. 26.
- Cornwell (1999). pp. 211–256.
- ^ Butuzov.
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- Mighall, 2003.
- Haefele-Thomas, Ardel (2012). Queer Others in Victorian Gothic: Transgressing Monstrosity (1st ed.). University of Wales Press. ISBN 978-0-7083-2464-6. JSTOR j.ctt9qhdw4.
- Punter, David (1980). "Later American Gothic". The Literature of Terror: A History of Gothic Fictions from 1765 to the Present Day. United Kingdom: Longmans. pp. 268–290. ISBN 9780582489219.
- Rubio, Jen (2015). "Introduction" to The Lane that Had No Turning, and Other Tales Concerning the People of Pontiac. Oakville, ON: Rock's Mills Press. pp. vii–viii. ISBN 978-0-9881293-7-5.
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- Cornwell (1999). Derek Offord: Karamzin's Gothic Tale, pp. 37–58.
- Cornwell (1999). Alessandra Tosi: "At the origins of the Russian gothic novel", pp. 59–82.
- Cornwell (1999). Michael Pursglove: "Does Russian gothic verse exist?" pp. 83–102.
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- Peterson, p. 36.
- Muireann Maguire, Stalin's Ghosts: Gothic Themes in Early Soviet Literature (Peter Lang Publishing, 2012; ISBN 3-0343-0787-X), p. 14.
- Clark-Greene, Barbara (2012). "More Classic Riffs". Patch Media.
- Hansen, Jim (2011). "A Nightmare on the Brain: Gothic Suspicion and Literary Modernism". Literature Compass. 8 (9): 635–644. doi:10.1111/j.1741-4113.2010.00763.x.
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- Goulart (1986)
- (Wisker (2005) pp. 232–233)
- Yardley, Jonathan (16 March 2004). "Du Maurier's 'Rebecca,' A Worthy 'Eyre' Apparent". The Washington Post.
- Skarda and Jaffe (1981), pp. 418–456.)
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- "What Is Gothic Romance? 13 Books That Will Enchant Your Inner Gothic Fan". Book Riot.
- Skarda and Jaffe (1981) pp. 464–465 and 478.
- Davenport-Hines (1998) pp. 357–358).
- Linda Parent Lesher, The Best Novels of the Nineties: A Reader's Guide. McFarland, 2000 ISBN 0-7864-0742-5, p. 267.
- "This Haunting New Bestseller Is Part du Maurier, Part del Toro". Slate.
- "Carmen Maria Machado Has Invented a New Genre: the Gothic Memoir". Electric Literature.
- Stephanou, Aspasia, Reading Vampire Gothic Through Blood, Palgrave, 2014.
- "The American Gothic – Digital Collections for the Classroom". Retrieved 3 May 2023.
- "The Gothic Terror of Donna Tartt's The Secret History". Horror Obsessive.
- "The Ancestor: Passion Trips Reason in this Gothic Extravaganza". Kirkus.
- "Anna Biller on How the Gothic Gives Voice to Women's Pleasure—and Pain".
- "A Review of The Little Stranger—The Novel".
- "The Thirteenth Tale: Gothic Storytelling at its Best".
- "Gothic Ambiguity: Helen Oyeyemi's White is for Witching". Blackgate.
- "The Essex Serpent by Sarah Perry review – a compulsive novel of ideas". The Guardian.
- "Book Review: The Silent Companions by Laura Purcell". The BiblioSanctum.
- Kavka, Misha (16 October 2014). The Gothic and the everyday: living Gothic. Springer. pp. 225–240. ISBN 978-1-137-40664-4.
- "Hello Darkness: New Zealand Gothic". robertleonard.org. Retrieved 26 July 2020.
- "Wide Open Fear: Australian Horror and Gothic Fiction". This Is Horror. 10 January 2013. Retrieved 26 July 2020.
- Doolan, Emma. "Australian Gothic: from Hanging Rock to Nick Cave and Kylie, this genre explores our dark side". The Conversation. Retrieved 26 July 2020.
- Sussex, Lucy (27 June 2019). "Rohan Wilson's audacious experiment with climate-change fiction". The Sydney Morning Herald.
The result is a book that while with one foot in Tasmanian Gothic, does represent a personal innovation.
- Holgate, Ben (2014). "The Impossibility of Knowing: Developing Magical Realism's Irony in Gould's Book of Fish". Journal of the Association for the Study of Australian Literature (JASAL). 14 (1). ISSN 1833-6027.
On one level, the book is a picaresque romp through colonial Tasmania in the early 1800s based on the not very reliable reminiscences of Gould, a convicted forger, painter of fish and inveterate raconteur. On another level, the novel is a Gothic horror tale in its reimagining of a violent, brutal and oppressive penal colony whose militaristic regime subjugated both the imported and original inhabitants.
- Britten, Naomi; Trilogy, Mandala; Bird, Carmel (2010). "Re-imagining the Gothic in Contemporary Australia: Carmel Bird Discusses Her Mandala Trilogy". Antipodes. 24 (1): 98–103. ISSN 0893-5580. JSTOR 41957860.
Richard Flanagan, Gould's Book of Fish, would have to be Gothic. Tasmanian history is pro-foundly dark and dreadful.
- Derkenne, Jamie (2017). "Richard Flanagan's and Alexis Wright's Magic Nihilism". Antipodes. 31 (2): 276–290. doi:10.13110/antipodes.31.2.0276. ISSN 0893-5580. JSTOR 10.13110/antipodes.31.2.0276.
Flanagan in Gould's Book of Fish and Wanting also seeks to interrogate assumed complacency through a strangely comic and dark rerendering of reality to draw out many truths, such as Tasmania's treatment of its Indigenous peoples.
- "The Distant Hours".
- says, Max (23 November 2014). "The Ecogothic".
- Hillard, Tom. "'Deep Into That Darkness Peering': An Essay on Gothic Nature". Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment, 16 (4), 2009.
- Smith, Andrew and William Hughes. "Introduction: Defining the ecoGothic" in EcoGothic. Andrew Smith and William Hughes, eds. Manchester University Press. 2013.
- Simon Estok, "Theorizing in a Space of Ambivalent Openness: Ecocriticism and Ecophobia", Literature and Environment, 16 (2), 2009; Simon Estok, The Ecophobia Hypothesis, Routledge, 2018.
- See "ecoGothic" in William Hughes, Key Concepts in the Gothic. Edinburgh University Press, 2018: 63.
- Edwards, Justin; Monnet, Agnieszka (15 February 2013). The Gothic in Contemporary Literature and Popular Culture: Pop Goth. Taylor and Francis. ISBN 9781136337888.
- Davenport-Hines (1998) pp. 355–358)
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- Baddeley (2002) p. 264.
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- "Let the Right One In". The Guardian.
- "A haunted house with its own sound effects". RoberEbert.com.
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- "The Little Stranger". RogerEbert.com.
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- Hughes, William (2012). Historical Dictionary of Gothic Literature. Scarecrow Press.
References
- Aldana Reyes, Xavier (2017). Spanish Gothic: National Identity, Collaboration and Cultural Adaptation. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1137306005.
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- Birkhead, Edith (1921), The Tale of Terror
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- Wisker, Gina (2005), Horror Fiction: An Introduction, Continuum: New York
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External links
- Works related to Gothic fiction at Wikisource
- Gothic Fiction at the British Library Archived 25 May 2018 at the Wayback Machine
- Key motifs in Gothic Fiction Archived 1 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine – a British Library film
- Gothic Fiction Bookshelf at Project Gutenberg
- Irish Journal of Gothic and Horror Studies
- Gothic author biographies
- The Gothic Imagination Archived 18 December 2017 at the Wayback Machine
- "Gothic", In Our Time, BBC Radio 4 discussion with Chris Baldick, A.N. Wilson and Emma Clery (Jan. 4, 2001)
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