Monday, May 27, 2019

Elements of the Gothic Genre

The gothic novel was invented al almost single-handedly by Horace Walpole, whose The Castle of Otranto (1764) contains essentially all the elements that constitute the genre. Walpoles novel was imitated not unaccompanied in the eighteenth century and not only in the novel form, but it has influenced writing, poetry, and still film making up to the present day. It introduced the term gothic romance to the literary world. Due to its inherently supernatural, surreal and sublime elements, it has maintained a dark and mysterious appeal. However, the roots of the knightly? precede the mediaeval? plant of Horace Walpole.The focus on the grotesque in the gallant period (visible especially in the paintings and architecture of the period) provides a key backdrop against which Gothic must be read, as do the violent and pr serveically grotesque tragedies written for the Elizabethan and Jacobean theatre, with their detailed, almost surgical exploration of the supernatural, vice, corruption , imprisonment, brutality and sexuality, all of which were to provide the truly substance of the Gothic authors. (Note particularly Macbeth? and Dr Faustus?) Gothic lit is devoted primarily to stories of villainy, the fantastic, and the darker supernatural forces.These forces often represent the dark side of human nature irrational or cataclysmic desires. Gothic literature derives its name from its similarities to the Gothic medieval cathedrals, which feature a majestic, unrestrained architectural style with often savage or grotesque laurel wreath (the word Gothic derives from Goth, the name of sensation of the barbaric Germanic tribes that invaded the Roman Empire). The Gothic genre (in both(prenominal) literature and architecture) is therefore associated with savagery and barbarism.Generally speaking, gothic literature delves into the macabre nature of humanity in its quest to satisfy mankinds intrinsic desire to plummet the depths of terror. The key features of gothic tex ts are 1) the appearance of the supernatural, 2) the psychology of horror and/or terror, 3) the poetics of the sublime, 4) a sense of mystery and dread 5) the appealing hero/villain, 6) the distressed heroine, and 7) fortified moral closure (usually at least). ELEMENTS OF THE GOTHIC IN TEXTS 1. circumstance in a castle or haunted house. The consummationion takes place in and around an old castle, sometimes jawmingly aband whizzd, sometimes occupied.The castle often contains secret passages, trap doors, secret live, dark or hidden staircases, and possibly ruined sections. The castle may be near or connected to caves, which contribute their own haunting flavour with their branchings, claustrophobia, and mystery. (Translated into modern filmmaking, the setting might be in an old house or mansionor even a new housewhere unusual camera angles, sustained close ups during movement, and darkness or shadows create the same sense of claustrophobia and entrapment. ) It is usually a d hyg ienicing that is be by or visited regularly by a ghost or other supposedly supernatural cosmos.Example Horace Walpoles The Castle of Otranto. Walpoles novel first introduced to gothic literature its single most influential convention, the haunted castle. The castle is the main setting of the write up and the centre of activity. Cemetery /Graveyard. A cemetery defines a place which is employ for the burial of the beat(p). Cemeteries are widely utilise in Gothic Literature as oftentimes frightening places where revenance corporation occur. Catacombs are especially evocative Gothic spaces because they enable the living to enter below ground a dark labyrinth resonating with the presences and mysteries of the dead. . The Weather is used in a number of shipway and forms, some of these being Mist This convention in Gothic Literature is often used to obscure objects (this can be related to the sublime) by cut visibility or to prelude the insertion of a terrifying person or thing Storms These often accomp any(prenominal) important events. Flashes of lightning accompany revelation din and downpours prefigure the appearance of a character or the beginning of a significant event (eg thunder precedes the entrance of the witches in Macbeth?Sunlight represents goodness and joyfulness it excessively has the power to bestow these upon characters. 3. An strain of mystery and suspense. (or a sense of dread) The work is pervaded by a panicening feeling, a fear enhanced by the unknown. Often the plot itself is built around a mystery, such as unknown parentage, a disappearance, or some other inexplicable event eg. Ghosts paseo or a painting coming to life. There may be an ancient prophecy connected with the castle or its inhabitants. It is usually obscure, partial or confusing.This serves to captivate the reader and encourage further reading. The atmosphere may also be seen acting upon the protagonists in texts, influencing them by exciting their curiosity or f ear. 4. Claustrophobia / Entrapment & poundage A favourite horror device of the Gothic finds a person confined or trapped, such as being shackled to a substructure or hidden away in some dark cell or cloister. This sense of there being no way out contributes to the confined psychology of Gothic space. It consists of an kinky dread of being confined in a close or narrow space.Often ttributed to actual physical imprisonment or entrapment, claustrophobia can also figure more(prenominal) generally as an indicator of the victims sense of dish uplessness or horrified mental awareness of being ensnarl in some dark, inscrutable destiny 5. The supernatural may be intrinsic to the plot. This is generally in the form of some kind of supernatural being or object, such as a vampire, witch, devil or ghost, which is frightening due to its refusal to adhere to the laws of nature, God or man. In Macbeth? there are trey witches. Dr Faustus communicates with a demon and indirectly with Lucife r.All of Paradise Lost? involves the supernatural. 6. Dreams, omens, portents, visions. Dreaming is characterised as a form of mental activity that takes place during the act of sleep. Dreams invoke strong emotions within the intakeer, such as ecstasy, joy and terror. Dreams dredge up these deep emotions and premonitions that reflect tellingly upon the dreamer, what one might conceal during waking hours but what emerges in sleep to haunt and arouse the dreamer. It is most likely due to this heightened emotional state that dreams are used so often within Gothic Literature.By invoking dream states within their characters, authors are able to illustrate emotions on a more unmediated and, oftentimes, terrifying level. Dreams reveal to the reader what the character is often too dismayed to realise about himself or herself. Dreaming also has an ancient relation with the act of foretelling wherein the future is glimpsed in the dream state. Perhaps the most illustrious Gothic example of significant dreams occurs in Shelleys Frankenstein? after Frankenstein awakes his creature he falls into a dream state that begins with his kissing of Elizabeth, his love.However, this kiss changes her in the most drastic way as she transforms into the rotting corpse of Caroline, Victors dead mother. Upon awakening from this horrifying dream, Victor finds himself staring into the face of the monster he has created. Interpretations of this dream chair to explorations of Frankensteins psyche, relational ability and sexuality. A character may have a move dream vision, or some phenomenon may be seen as a portent of coming events. For example, if the statue of the lord of the manor falls over, it may portend his death.In modern prevarication, a character might see something (a shadowy figure incisive another shadowy figure) and think that it was a dream. This might be thought of as an imitation vision. Banquo in Macbeth? dreams of the weird sisters?. Lady Macbeth?s suppressed misde ed emerges when she is seen sleepwalking. 7. The stock characters of Gothic fiction include tyrants, villains, bandits, maniacs, Byronic heroes, persecuted maidens, femmes fatales, madwomen, magicians, vampires, werewolves, monsters, demons, angel, fallen angel, the beauty and the beast, revenants, ghosts, perambulating skeletons, the Wandering Jew, and the Devil himself. .Villain-Hero ( friction matchic, Promethean, Byronic Hero) The villain of a story who either 1) poses as a hero at the beginning of the story or 2) simply possesses enough heroic characteristics (charisma, sympathetic past, etc) so that either the reader or the other characters see the villain-hero as more than a simple charlatan or bad guy. Three closely related types exist Satanic Hero a Villain-Hero whose villainous deeds and justifications of them make him a more interesting character than the rather bland good hero.Example The origin of this prototype comes from Romantic misreading of Miltons Paradise Lost, w hose Satan poets like Blake and Shelley regarded as a far more compelling figure than the moralistic God of Book III of the epic. Gothic examples Beckfords Vathek, Radcliffes Montoni, and just about any vampire. Promethean a Villain-Hero who has done good but only by performing an over-reaching or rebellious act. Prometheus from ancient Greek mythology saved mankind but only after stealing fire and ignoring Zeus order that mankind should be kept in a state of subjugation.Mary Shelleys Frankenstein is tellingly subtitled the Modern Prometheus. Consider whether Dr Faustus is a Promethean hero. (The overreaching arches and spires of Gothic cathedrals reach wildly to the sky as if the builders were trying to grasp the heavens , an ambition for the eternal that is likewise expressed in many works of Gothic literature (consider Manfreds quest for supernatural power in Byrons poem, or Frankensteins quest to become godlike by creating life or Dr. Faustus pact religious offering his soul for 24 years of power).Byronic Hero a later variation of the antithetically mixed Villain-Hero. Aristocratic, suave, moody, handsome, solitary, secretive, brilliant, cynical, sexually intriguing, and nursing a secret wound, he is celebrated because of his fatal attraction for female characters and readers and continues to occasion debate about gender issues. Example Byrons Childe Harold and, more gothically, Manfred are the best examples, but this darkly attractive and very conflicted male figure surfaces everywhere in the 19th and 20th century gothic eg Heathcliff or Wilde?s Dorian Gray.Byron himself was described as mad, bad and terrible to know. The Byronic hero in literature and life A. Robin Hood B. Richard III C. Iago D. Faust/ Dr. Faustus E. Miltons Satan F. Victor Frankenstein G. Frankensteins Creature H. Dracula I. Byron?s Manfred J. Cain K. Lara L. Conrad M. Childe Harold N. Byron, Shelley O. Ambrosio P. Peter Quint Q. fly the coop Jessel R. Stalin S. Hitler T. The Un abomber U. Prometheus 9. The Pursued Protagonist This refers to the idea of a pursuing force that relentlessly acts in a severely negative manner on a character.This persecution often implies the notion of some sort of a curse or other form of terminal and utterly unavoidable damnation, a notion that usually suggests a return or hangover of traditional religious ideology to chastise the character for some real or imagined wrong against the moral order. The Wandering Jew is by chance the archetypically pursued/pursuing protagonist. Drew McCray 10. Pursuit of the Heroine This is the pursuit of a virtuous and idealistic (and usually poetically inclined) young woman by a villain, normally portrayed as a wicked, older but still potent aristocrat.While in many early Gothic novels such a chase occurs crosswise a Mediterranean forest and/or through a subterranean labyrinth, the pursuit of the heroine is by no means limited to these settings. This pursuit represents a threat to the young la dys ideals and morals (usually meaning her virginity), to which the heroine responds in the early works with a passive courage in the face of danger later gothic heroines more and more become more active and occasionally effective in their attempts to escape this pursuit and indict patriarchy. eg. Angela Carter?s The Bloody Chamber. ?Women in distress. As an appeal to the poignancy and sympathy of the reader, the female characters often face events that leave them fainting, terrified, screaming, and/or sobbing. A lonely, pensive, and oppressed heroine is often the central figure of the novel, so her sufferings are even more pronounced and the focus of attention. The women suffer all the more because they are often abandoned, left alone (either on purpose or by accident), and have no protector at times.Women threatened by a almighty, impulsive, tyrannical male. One or more male characters has the power, as king, lord of the manor, father, or guardian, to demand that one or more of the female characters do something intolerable. The woman may be commanded to marry someone she does not love (it may even be the powerful male himself), or commit a crime. 11. The Outsider The one theme that cuts through virtually all Gothic is that of the outsider, embodied in wanderers like Frankensteins creature.Gothic fiction is concerned with the outsider, whether the stationary figure who represses his difference, or the wandering figure who seeks for some kind of salvation, or else the individual who for whatever reason- moves entirely outside the norm. In any event, he is beyond the moderating impulses in guild, and he must be punished for his transgression. He is gloomy and melancholy, full of self-pity and self-hatred. Like Cain, he is the perpetual outsider, marked by his appearance, crack of doomed to wander the four corners of the earth, alone and reviled.It may be argued that Frankenstein himself becomes an outsider as he grows more and more like his creation. . W hile the society at large of all time appears bourgeois in its culture and morality, the Gothic outsider is a counterforce driven by strange longings and destructive needs. While everyone else appears sane, he is insane while everyone else appears bound by legalities, he is trying to snap the pitiless constrictions of the law while everyone else seems to lack any peculiarities of taste or behaviour, he feels only estrangement, sick longings, terrible surges of power and devastation.Take for example, Heathcliff in Wuthering Heights?. 12. Possession The popularity of belief in demonic possession seems to have originated within Christian devotion during the Middle Ages. During this time, Christians lived in fear concerning the war being waged between God and the Devil over every mortal soul. Hence, this fear of possession seemed to culminate into an act that could be viewed by the mortal eye. This act is defined as the pressure possession of a mortal body by the Devil or one of his d emons.There are two types of possession and either can be voluntary or involuntary. Voluntary possession seems to involve a willing exchange in the form of some compact between evil spirit and mortal, often involving wealth, power or goods (eg. The pact Faustus makes) involuntary possession occurs when the devil randomly selects an unplanned host. The two types of possession consist of the transference of the Devil or demon directly into the mortal body or the sending of the Devil or demon into the body by a third party, usually a mortal dabbler in the dark arts.Following the act, the possessed is said to show many symptoms including abnormal strength, personality changes, fits, convulsions, bodily odours resembling sulphur, lewd and lascivious actions, the ability to levitate, the ability to speak in tongues or the ability to foretell future events. Many religions acknowledge the act of possession still today, most notably the Catholic Church. There seem to be three ways in which to end a possession. 13. Revenance This is the return of the dead to terrorise or to settle some score with the living.4. Revenge Revenge is characterized as the act of repaying someone for a harm that the person has caused the idea also points back generically to one of the key influences upon Gothic literature the revenge tragedies of Elizabethan and Jacobean drama. Revenge may be enacted upon a loved one, a family member, a friend, an object or even an area. Within Gothic Literature, revenge is notably prominent and can be enacted by or upon mortals as well as spirits.Revenge can take many forms, such as harm to body, harm to loved ones, and harm to family. The most Gothic version of revenge in Gothic Literature is the idea that it can be a guiding force in the revenance of the dead. 15. Unreliable Narrator A narrator tells a story and determines the story?s point of view. An unreliable narrator, however, does not understand the importance of a particular situation or makes an i ncorrect conclusion or confidence about an event that he/she witnesses.An important issue in determining the The Turn of the Screw. 16. Multiple Narrative/Spiral Narrative Method The story is frequently told through a series of secret manuscripts or multiple tales, each revealing a deeper secret, so the narrative gradually spirals inward toward the hidden truth. The narrator is often a firstperson narrator compelled to tell the story to a fascinated or captive listener (representing the captivating power of forbidden knowledge). (Note Wuthering Heights?) 17. High, even overwrought emotion.The narration may be highly sentimental, and the characters are often overcome by anger, sorrow, surprise, and especially, terror. Characters suffer from raw nerves and a feeling of be doom. Crying and emotional speeches are frequent. Breathlessness and panic are common. In the filmed gothic, screaming is common. 18. The Sublime The definition of this key term has long been a contested term, but the idea of the sublime is essential to an understanding of Gothic poetics and, especially, the attempt to defend or justify the literature of terror.Put raw materialally (and this really is basic a fuller understanding of the Sublime would be useful to students of Wordsworth or any Gothic Literature), the Sublime is an overpowering sense of the greatness and power of nature, which can be uplifting, aweinspiring and terrifying, caused by experience of beauty, vastness or grandeur. Sublime moments lead us to consider the place of humanity in the universe, and the power exhibited in the world. 19. loathsomeness as intrinsic to humanityGenerally speaking, gothic literature delves into the macabre nature of humanity in its quest to satiate mankinds intrinsic desire to plumb the depths of terror. 0. Necromancy This is the black art of communicating with the dead. This is usually done to obtain information about the future, but can also be used for other purposes, such as getting the d ead to perform deeds of which humans are not capable. The conjurer often stood in a circle, such as a pentagram, in order to protect himself from the dead spirit, yet he was often overpowered by the spirit. Examples The most famous examples of necromancy can be open up in literary renditions of the Faust legend, from Marlowe to Johann Wolfgang von Goethe to Byron with his Manfred.In these works, Faust not only speaks with the devil in order to strike a deal but necromantically invokes various dead, famous figures from the past for his entertainment and edification. 21. Blood -This is a prominent symbol in Gothic works often intimating the paradox of the human condition blood can represent both life and death, or both guilt (e. g. , murder) and innocence (e. g. , redemptive blood). Consider references to blood in Macbeth?, Byrons Manfred and Mary Shelleys Frankenstein. 22.Marriage as Resolution The importance of marriage in this scheme cannot be overstated. Not only does movement to ward matrimony in the Gothics present trigger the appearance of the buried past, but that buried past itself always contains information tied to the institutions of matrimony or family interest. 23. Sadism The word sadism was coined to describe the writings of Donatien-AlphonseFrancois, the Marquis de Sade. Sadism is a sexual perversion where one person gains gratification by inflicting physical or mental pain on others.It can also mean a delight in torment or excessive cruelty. (Heathcliff in Wuthering Heights? / or the husband in The Bloody Chamber?. 24. Strong Moral Closure If de Sade is to be believed, the Gothic genre arose as a response to the brutality and bloodiness of Romantic society, and it as part of this response that Gothic fiction usually contains a strong moral. 25. The metonymy of gloom and horror. Metonymy is a subtype of metaphor, in which something (like rain) is used to stand for something else (like sorrow).For example, the film industry likes to use metonymy as a quick shorthand, so we often notice that it is raining in funeral scenes. Note that the following metonymies for doom and gloom all suggest some element of mystery, danger, or the supernatural. wind, especially howling doors grating on rusty hinges footsteps approaching lights in abandoned rooms characters trapped in a room ruins of buildings thunder and lightning rain, especially blowing sighs, moans, howls, eerie sounds clanking chains gusts of wind blowing out lights doors suddenly slamming shut aying of distant dogs (or wolves? ) half-crazed laughter 26. The vocabulary of the gothic. The constant use of the appropriate vocabulary set creates the atmosphere of the gothic.Here as an example are some of the words (in several categories) that help make up the vocabulary of the gothic in The Castle of Otranto Mystery diabolical, enchantment, ghost, goblins, haunted, infernal, magic, magician, miracle, necromancer, omens, ominous, portent, preternatural, prodigy, prophecy, secret , sorcerer, spectre, spirits, strangeness, talisman, vision Fear, Terror, or Sorrow fflicted, affliction, agony, anguish, apprehensions, apprehensive, commiseration, concern, despair, dismal, dismay, dread, dreaded, dreading, fearing, frantic, fright, frightened, grief, hopeless, horrid, horror, lamentable, melancholy, miserable, mournfully, panic, sadly, scared, shrieks, sorrow, sympathy, tears, terrible, terrified, terror, unhappy, wretched Surprise alarm, amazement, astonished, astonishment, shocking, staring, surprise, surprised, thunderstruck, wonder Haste anxious, breathless, flight, frantic, hastened, hastily, impatience, impatient, impatiently, impetuosity, precipitately, running, sudden, suddenlyAnger anger, angrily, choler, enraged, furious, fury, incense, incensed, provoked, rage, raving, resentment, temper, wrath, wrathful, wrathfully Largeness enormous, gigantic, giant, large, tremendous, vast 27. Elements of Romance In addition to the standard gothic aspects, many goth ic novels contain elements of romance as well. Elements of romance include these sizable love. Heart stirring, often sudden, emotions create a life or death commitment. Many times this love is the first the character has felt with this overwhelming power. uncertainty of reciprocation. What is the beloved thinking?Is the lovers love returned or not? Unreturned love. Someone loves in vain (at least temporarily). Later, the love may be returned. Tension between true love and fathers control, disapproval, or choice. Most often, the father of the woman disapproves of the man she loves. Lovers parted. Some obstacle arises and separates the lovers, geographically or in some other way. One of the lovers is banished, arrested, forced to flee, locked in a dungeon, or sometimes, disappears without explanation. Or, an explanation may be given (by the person opposing the lovers being together) that later turns out to be false.Gothicism In literary criticism, this refers to works characterised by a taste for the medieval or morbidly attractive. A gothic novel prominently features elements of horror, the supernatural, gloom, and violence clanking chains, terror, charnel houses, ghosts, medieval castles, and mysteriously slamming doors. The term gothic novel is also applied to novels that lack elements of the traditional Gothic setting but that create a similar atmosphere of terror or dread. Mary Shelleys Frankenstein is perhaps the best-known English work of this kind. Grotesque 1) This term originated from oddly shaped ornaments found within Roman dwellings, or grottoes, during the first century. From a literary standpoint, this term implies a mutation of the characters, plants and/or animals. This mutation transforms the normal features and/or behaviours into veritable extremes that are meant to be frightening and/or disturbingly comic (Cornwell 273. (2) The term grotesque also defines a work in which two separate modes, comedy and tragedy, are mixed. The result is a di sturbing fiction wherein comic circumstances prelude horrific tragedy and vice versa.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.