The nocturnal minstrel; or, The spirit of the wood
Author : Eleanor Sleath
Publisher :
Page : 204 pages
File Size : 35,85 MB
Release : 1810
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Author : Eleanor Sleath
Publisher :
Page : 204 pages
File Size : 35,85 MB
Release : 1810
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Author : Eleanor Sleath
Publisher :
Page : 196 pages
File Size : 43,15 MB
Release : 1810
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Author : Clive Bloom
Publisher : Springer Nature
Page : 609 pages
File Size : 46,37 MB
Release : 2022-01-01
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 3030845621
This handbook provides a comprehensive overview of research on the Gothic Revival. The Gothic Revival was based on emotion rather than reason and when Horace Walpole created Strawberry Hill House, a gleaming white castle on the banks of the Thames, he had to create new words to describe the experience of gothic lifestyle. Nevertheless, Walpole’s house produced nightmares and his book The Castle of Otranto was the first truly gothic novel, with supernatural, sensational and Shakespearean elements challenging the emergent fiction of social relationships. The novel’s themes of violence, tragedy, death, imprisonment, castle battlements, dungeons, fair maidens, secrets, ghosts and prophecies led to a new genre encompassing prose, theatre, poetry and painting, whilst opening up a whole world of imagination for entrepreneurial female writers such as Mary Shelley, Joanna Baillie and Ann Radcliffe, whose immensely popular books led to the intense inner landscapes of the Bronte sisters. Matthew Lewis’s The Monk created a new gothic: atheistic, decadent, perverse, necrophilic and hellish. The social upheaval of the French Revolution and the emergence of the Romantic movement with its more intense (and often) atheistic self-absorption led the gothic into darker corners of human experience with a greater emphasis on the inner life, hallucination, delusion, drug addiction, mental instability, perversion and death and the emerging science of psychology. The intensity of the German experience led to an emphasis on doubles and schizophrenic behaviour, ghosts, spirits, mesmerism, the occult and hell. This volume charts the origins of this major shift in social perceptions and completes a trilogy of Palgrave Handbooks on the Gothic—combined they provide an exhaustive survey of current research in Gothic studies, a go-to for students and researchers alike.
Author : Eugenia C. DeLamotte
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 367 pages
File Size : 15,44 MB
Release : 1990-02-22
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 0195363469
This book argues that the source of Gothic terror is anxiety about the boundaries of the self: a double fear of separateness and unity that has had a special significance for women writers and readers. Exploring the psychological, religious, and epistemological context of this anxiety, DeLamotte argues that the Gothic vision focuses simultaneously on the private demons of the psyche and the social realities that helped to shape them. Her analysis includes works of English and American authors, among them Henry James, Mary Shelley, Herman Melville, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Emily Brontë, Charlotte Brontë, and a number of often neglected popular women Gothicists.
Author : James Savage
Publisher :
Page : 934 pages
File Size : 15,53 MB
Release : 1808
Category : Archives
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Author : Rictor Norton
Publisher : A&C Black
Page : 788 pages
File Size : 48,21 MB
Release : 2005-04-01
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780826485854
This is an anthology of Gothic Literature, set within the context of contemporary criticism and readers' responses. It includes selections from the major practitioners and many of their followers, as well as contemporary reviews, private letters and diaries, chapbooks, and contemporary anecdotes about dramatic performances and the design of theatre sets. The selections provide representative samples of the major genres - historical gothic, the Radcliffe school of terror, the Lewis school of horror, tragic melodrama, comic parody, supernatural poetry and ballads, book reviews and literary criticism and anti-Gothic polemic.
Author : Ann B. Tracy
Publisher : University Press of Kentucky
Page : 225 pages
File Size : 46,73 MB
Release : 2014-07-15
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 0813164796
A research guide for specialists in the Gothic novel, the Romantic movement, the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century novel, and popular culture, this work contains summaries of more than two hundred novels, reputed to be Gothic, published in English between 1790 and 1830. Also included are indexes of titles and characters and an extensive index of characteristic objects, motifs, and themes that recur in the novels—such as corpses, bloody and otherwise, dungeons, secret passageways, filicide, fratricide, infanticide, matricide, patricide, and suicide. The novels described, including those by such writers as Charlotte Dacre, Louisa Sidney Stanhope, Regina Maria Roche, Charles Maturin, and Mary Shelley, are for the most part out of print and circulation and are unavailable except in rare book rooms. Thus this book provides the researcher with ready access to information that would otherwise be difficult to obtain.
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Page : 554 pages
File Size : 34,35 MB
Release : 1810
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Page : 520 pages
File Size : 42,22 MB
Release : 1810
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Page : 522 pages
File Size : 36,42 MB
Release : 1810
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