Gothic Fiction
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Gothic fiction, sometimes called Gothic horror in the 20th century, is a loose literary aesthetic of fear and haunting. The name is a reference 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 Horatio Walpole (), 4th Earl of Orford (24 September 1717 – 2 March 1797), better known as Horace Walpole, was an English writer, art historian, man of letters, antiquarian, and Whigs (British political party), Whig politician. He had Strawb ...
'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, and novelists such as Mary Shelley, Charles Maturin, Walter Scott and
E. T. A. Hoffmann Ernst Theodor Amadeus Hoffmann (born Ernst Theodor Wilhelm Hoffmann; 24 January 1776 – 25 June 1822) was a German Romantic author of fantasy and Gothic horror, a jurist, composer, music critic and artist. Penrith Goff, "E.T.A. Hoffmann" in E ...
frequently drew upon gothic motifs in their works. The early Victorian period continued the use of gothic, in novels by Charles Dickens and the Brontë sisters, as well as works by the American writers Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel Hawthorne. Later prominent works were ''
Dracula ''Dracula'' is a novel by Bram Stoker, published in 1897. As an epistolary novel, the narrative is related through letters, diary entries, and newspaper articles. It has no single protagonist, but opens with solicitor Jonathan Harker taking ...
'' by
Bram Stoker Abraham Stoker (8 November 1847 – 20 April 1912) was an Irish author who is celebrated for his 1897 Gothic horror novel '' Dracula''. During his lifetime, he was better known as the personal assistant of actor Sir Henry Irving and busine ...
, Richard Marsh's '' The Beetle'' and Robert Louis Stevenson's '' Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde''. Twentieth-century contributors include Daphne du Maurier,
Stephen King Stephen Edwin King (born September 21, 1947) is an American author of horror, supernatural fiction, suspense, crime, science-fiction, and fantasy novels. Described as the "King of Horror", a play on his surname and a reference to his high s ...
, Shirley Jackson, Anne Rice and Toni Morrison.


Characteristics

Gothic fiction is characterized by an environment of fear, the threat of
supernatural Supernatural refers to phenomena or entities that are beyond the laws of nature. The term is derived from Medieval Latin , from Latin (above, beyond, or outside of) + (nature) Though the corollary term "nature", has had multiple meanings si ...
events, and the intrusion of the past upon the present. Gothic fiction is distinguished from other forms of scary or supernatural stories, such as
fairy tale A fairy tale (alternative names include fairytale, fairy story, magic tale, or wonder tale) is a short story that belongs to the folklore genre. Such stories typically feature magic (paranormal), magic, incantation, enchantments, and mythical ...
s, by the specific theme of the present being haunted by the past. 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. Especially in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, characteristic settings include castles, religious buildings like monasteries and
convent A convent is a community of monks, nuns, religious brothers or, sisters or priests. Alternatively, ''convent'' means the building used by the community. The word is particularly used in the Catholic Church, Lutheran churches, and the Anglic ...
s, and
crypt A crypt (from Latin ''crypta'' "vault") is a stone chamber beneath the floor of a church or other building. It typically contains coffins, sarcophagi, or religious relics. Originally, crypts were typically found below the main apse of a chur ...
s. 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, and nocturnal landscapes and dreams. Gothic fiction often moves between " high culture" and "
low Low or LOW or lows, may refer to: People * Low (surname), listing people surnamed Low Places * Low, Quebec, Canada * Low, Utah, United States * Lo Wu station (MTR code LOW), Hong Kong; a rail station * Salzburg Airport (ICAO airport code: LO ...
" or " popular culture".


Role of architecture

Gothic literature is intimately 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 Enlightened may refer to: * ''Enlightened'' (TV series), an American comedy-drama * ''Enlightened'' (album), 2007, by Dynamic Duo * The Enlightened, a faction in ''Ingress'' (video game) See also * Enlightened self-interest, a philosophy in et ...
Establishment, the literary Gothic embodies an appreciation of the joys of extreme emotion, the thrills of fearfulness and awe inherent in the
sublime Sublime may refer to: Entertainment * SuBLime, a comic imprint of Viz Media for BL manga * Sublime (band), an American ska punk band ** ''Sublime'' (album), 1996 * ''Sublime'' (film), a 2007 horror film * SubLime FM, a Dutch radio station dedic ...
, 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 coveys religious associations. Setting the novel in a Gothic castle was meant to imply a story not only set in the past, but 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 " aydown her book with affected indifference, or momentary shame,""Austen's ''Northanger Abbey''", Second Edition, Broadview, 2002. according to
Jane Austen Jane Austen (; 16 December 1775 – 18 July 1817) was an English novelist known primarily for her six major novels, which interpret, critique, and comment upon the British landed gentry at the end of the 18th century. Austen's plots of ...
, author of '' Northanger Abbey''. The Gothic novel shaped its form for woman readers to "turn to Gothic romances to find support for their own mixed feelings."Ronald "Terror Gothic: Nightmare and Dream in Ann Radcliffe and Charlotte Bronte", ''The Female Gothic'', Ed. Fleenor, Eden Press Inc., 1983. Female Gothic narratives focus on such topics as a persecuted heroine in flight from a villainous father and in search of an absent mother, while male writers tend towards 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.Smith, Andrew, and Diana Wallace, "The Female Gothic: Then and Now." ''Gothic Studies'', 25 August 2004, pp. 1–7. 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 problematic and unsatisfying maternal position, and their role within that society. Women's fears of entrapment in the domestic, their own body, 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"Nichols "Place and Eros in Radcliffe", Lewis and Bronte, ''The Female Gothic'', ed. Fleenor, Eden Press Inc., 1983. in the face of the realized impossibilities of the supernatural. As protagonists like Adeline in ''
The Romance of the Forest ''The Romance of the Forest'' is a Gothic novel by Ann Radcliffe that was first published in 1791. It combines an air of mystery and suspense with an examination of the tension between hedonism and morality. The novel was her first major, pop ...
'' 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

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 own works, as well as legitimize the emerging genre as serious literature to the public. Tragedies such as '' Hamlet'', ''
Macbeth ''Macbeth'' (, full title ''The Tragedie of Macbeth'') is a tragedy by William Shakespeare. It is thought to have been first performed in 1606. It dramatises the damaging physical and psychological effects of political ambition on those w ...
'', '' King Lear'', ''
Romeo and Juliet ''Romeo and Juliet'' is a Shakespearean tragedy, tragedy written by William Shakespeare early in his career about the romance between two Italian youths from feuding families. It was among Shakespeare's most popular plays during his lifetim ...
'' and ''
Richard III Richard III (2 October 145222 August 1485) was King of England and Lord of Ireland from 26 June 1483 until his death in 1485. He was the last king of the House of York and the last of the Plantagenet dynasty. His defeat and death at the Battl ...
'', with plots revolving around the supernatural, revenge, murder, ghosts, witchcraft, omens, written in dramatic pathos, and set in medieval castles, was a huge influence upon early Gothic authors, who frequently quote, and make allusions to Shakespeare's works.
John Milton John Milton (9 December 1608 – 8 November 1674) was an English poet and intellectual. His 1667 epic poem '' Paradise Lost'', written in blank verse and including over ten chapters, was written in a time of immense religious flux and political ...
's ''
Paradise Lost ''Paradise Lost'' is an epic poem in blank verse by the 17th-century English poet John Milton (1608–1674). The first version, published in 1667, consists of ten books with over ten thousand lines of verse (poetry), verse. A second edition fo ...
'' (1667) was also very influential amongst Gothic writers, who were especially drawn to the tragic anti-hero character
Satan Satan,, ; grc, ὁ σατανᾶς or , ; ar, شيطانالخَنَّاس , also known as Devil in Christianity, the Devil, and sometimes also called Lucifer in Christianity, is an non-physical entity, entity in the Abrahamic religions ...
, 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 Alexander Pope (21 May 1688 O.S. – 30 May 1744) was an English poet, translator, and satirist of the Enlightenment era who is considered one of the most prominent English poets of the early 18th century. An exponent of Augustan literature, ...
, who had a considerable influence upon Walpole, was the first significant poet of the 18th century to write a poem in an authentic Gothic manner. '' Eloisa to Abelard'' (1717), which tells 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 the development of 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 Fonthill Abbey—also known as Beckford's Folly—was a large Gothic Revival country house built between 1796 and 1813 at Fonthill Gifford in Wiltshire, England, at the direction of William Thomas Beckford and architect James Wyatt. It was bu ...
, 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; indeed, it was far older. The corpses, skeletons, and churchyards so commonly associated with early Gothic works were popularized by the Graveyard poets, and were also present in novels such as
Daniel Defoe Daniel Defoe (; born Daniel Foe; – 24 April 1731) was an English writer, trader, journalist, pamphleteer and spy. He is most famous for his novel ''Robinson Crusoe'', published in 1719, which is claimed to be second only to the Bible in its ...
's ''
A Journal of the Plague Year ''A Journal of the Plague Year: Being Observations or Memorials, Of the most Remarkable Occurrences, As well Publick as Private, which happened in London During the last Great Visitation In 1665'', commonly called ''A Journal of the Plague Ye ...
'', which contains comical scenes of plague carts and piles of corpses. Even earlier, poets like
Edmund Spenser Edmund Spenser (; 1552/1553 – 13 January 1599) was an English poet best known for ''The Faerie Queene'', an epic poem and fantastical allegory celebrating the Tudor dynasty and Elizabeth I. He is recognized as one of the premier craftsmen of ...
evoked a dreary and sorrowful mood in such poems as Epithalamion. All of the aspects of pre-Gothic literature occur to some degree in the Gothic, but even taken together, they still fall short of true Gothic. What was lacking 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 an emotional one, and was finally provided by
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's 1757 work, '' A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful'', which "finally codif edthe 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"; the Sublime is most often evoked by Terror; 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 a
Jacobite Jacobite means follower of Jacob or James. Jacobite may refer to: Religion * Jacobites, followers of Saint Jacob Baradaeus (died 578). Churches in the Jacobite tradition and sometimes called Jacobite include: ** Syriac Orthodox Church, sometimes ...
rebellion (1745) more recent to the first Gothic novel (1764). A 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 The bourgeoisie ( , ) is a social class, equivalent to the middle or upper middle class. They are distinguished from, and traditionally contrasted with, the proletariat by their affluence, and their great cultural and financial capital. They ...
reader of late eighteenth century England.


Eighteenth-century Gothic novels

The first work to call itself "Gothic" was
Horace Walpole Horatio Walpole (), 4th Earl of Orford (24 September 1717 – 2 March 1797), better known as Horace Walpole, was an English writer, art historian, man of letters, antiquarian, and Whigs (British political party), Whig politician. He had Strawb ...
'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 revealed himself as the true author in the second edition, which added 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. Walpole did not initially prompt many imitators. Beginning with Clara Reeve's '' The Old English Baron'' (1778), the 1780s saw more writers attempting his combination of supernatural plots with emotionally realistic characters. Examples include Sophia Lee's ''
The Recess ''The'' () is a grammatical Article (grammar), article in English language, English, denoting persons or things already mentioned, under discussion, implied or otherwise presumed familiar to listeners, readers, or speakers. It is the definite ...
'' (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. Particularly popular were ''
The Romance of the Forest ''The Romance of the Forest'' is a Gothic novel by Ann Radcliffe that was first published in 1791. It combines an air of mystery and suspense with an examination of the tension between hedonism and morality. The novel was her first major, pop ...
'' (1791) and '' The Mysteries of Udolpho'' (1794). Walter Scott 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." 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), was a response to Lewis's '' The Monk'' (1796). Other notable Gothic novels of the 1790s include
William Godwin William Godwin (3 March 1756 – 7 April 1836) was an English journalist, political philosopher and novelist. He is considered one of the first exponents of utilitarianism and the first modern proponent of anarchism. Godwin is most famous for ...
'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. 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 Historical fiction is a literary genre in which the plot takes place in a setting related to the past events, but is fictional. Although the term is commonly used as a synonym for historical fiction literature, it can also be applied to other ty ...
. 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. After 1800 there was a period in which Gothic parodies outnumbered sincere Gothic novels. In '' The Heroine'' by
Eaton Stannard Barrett Eaton Stannard Barrett (1786 – 20 March 1820) was an Irish poet and author of political satires. He also wrote a comic novel: ''The Heroine, or: Adventures of a Fair Romance Reader'' (1813). Career Born in County Cork, son of Richard Barre ...
(1813), Gothic tropes are exaggerated for comic effect. In
Jane Austen Jane Austen (; 16 December 1775 – 18 July 1817) was an English novelist known primarily for her six major novels, which interpret, critique, and comment upon the British landed gentry at the end of the 18th century. Austen's plots of ...
's novel '' Northanger Abbey'' (1818), the naive protagonist, much like a female Quixote, conceives herself a heroine of a Radcliffean romance and imagines murder and villainy on every side, though the truth turns out to be much more prosaic. This novel is also noted for including a list of early Gothic works since known as the Northanger Horrid Novels.


Second generation or ''Jüngere Romantik''

The poetry, romantic adventures, and character of Lord Byron—characterised 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. Byron features as the title character in Lady Caroline's own Gothic novel '' Glenarvon'' (1816). Byron was also the host of the celebrated ghost-story competition involving himself,
Percy Bysshe Shelley Percy Bysshe Shelley ( ; 4 August 17928 July 1822) was one of the major English Romantic poets. A radical in his poetry as well as in his political and social views, Shelley did not achieve fame during his lifetime, but recognition of his achie ...
, Mary Shelley, and
John William Polidori John William Polidori (7 September 1795 – 24 August 1821) was a British writer and physician. He is known for his associations with the Romantic movement and credited by some as the creator of the vampire genre of fantasy Fantasy is a ...
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 '' 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. Mary Shelley's novel, though clearly influenced by the Gothic tradition, is often considered the first science fiction novel, despite the novel's lack of any scientific explanation for the monster's animation and the focus instead on the moral dilemmas and consequences of such a creation.
John Keats John Keats (31 October 1795 – 23 February 1821) was an English poet of the second generation of Romantic poets, with Lord Byron and Percy Bysshe Shelley. His poems had been in publication for less than four years when he died of tuberculo ...
' '' La Belle Dame sans Merci'' (1819) and '' Isabella, or the Pot of Basil'' (1820) feature mysteriously fey ladies.Skarda and Jaffe (1981), pp. 33–35 and 132–133. 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. Walter Scott, although ushering in the historical novel, and in effect, turning popularity away from Gothic fiction, frequently employs Gothic elements in his novels and poetry. Scott drew upon oral folklore, fireside tails, and ancient superstitions, often creating a juxtaposition between rationality and the supernatural. Novels such as '' The Bride of Lammermoor'' (1819), in which the character's 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 plotting, but with one significant twist: it is set in the twenty-second century and speculates on fantastic scientific developments that might have occurred four hundred years in the future, making it and ''Frankenstein'' among the earliest examples of the science fiction genre developing from Gothic traditions.Lisa Hopkins, "Jane C. Loudon's The Mummy!: Mary Shelley Meets George Orwell, and They Go in a Balloon to Egypt", in Cardiff Corvey: ''Reading the Romantic Text'', 10 (June 2003)
Cf.ac.uk (25 January 2006). Retrieved on 18 September 2018.
During two decades, the most famous author of Gothic literature in Germany was the polymath
E. T. A. Hoffmann Ernst Theodor Amadeus Hoffmann (born Ernst Theodor Wilhelm Hoffmann; 24 January 1776 – 25 June 1822) was a German Romantic author of fantasy and Gothic horror, a jurist, composer, music critic and artist. Penrith Goff, "E.T.A. Hoffmann" in E ...
. His novel ''
The Devil's Elixirs ''The Devil's Elixirs'' (german: Die Elixiere des Teufels) is a novel by E. T. A. Hoffmann. Published in 1815, the basic idea for the story was adopted from Matthew Gregory Lewis's novel ''The Monk'', which is itself mentioned in the text. A ...
'' (1815) was influenced by Lewis's '' The Monk'' and even mentions it. The novel explores the motive of
Doppelgänger A doppelgänger (), a compound noun formed by combining the two nouns (double) and (walker or goer) (), doppelgaenger or doppelganger is a biologically unrelated look-alike, or a double, of a living person. In fiction and mythology, a doppelg ...
, 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 the Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué's Gothic story '' Undine'' (1816), for which de la Motte Fouqué himself 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 ''The Marble Statue'' (german: Das Marmorbild) is an 1818 novella by the German writer Joseph von Eichendorff. Set around Lucca, it is about a man who struggles to choose between piety, represented by a musician and a beautiful maiden, and a worl ...
'', 1818), Ludwig Achim von Arnim (''Die Majoratsherren'', 1819), and Adelbert von Chamisso (''Peter Schlemihls wundersame Geschichte'', 1814). After them,
Wilhelm Meinhold Johannes Wilhelm Meinhold (27 February 1797Bridgwater (2000), p. 213. – 30 November 1851) was a Pomeranian priest and author. Life Meinhold was born in Lütow on the island of Usedom, where his father Georg Wilhelm Meinhold (1767–1728) ...
wrote ''
The Amber Witch ''The Amber Witch'' is a German novel published by Wilhelm Meinhold (1797–1851) in 1838. Its German title is ''Maria Schweidler, die Bernsteinhexe''. The novel was originally published as a literary hoax which purported to be an actual 17th-cent ...
'' (1838) and '' Sidonia von Bork'' (1847). In Spain, the priest Pascual Pérez Rodríguez was the most assiduous 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 which 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 Orest Mikhailovich Somov ( Russian and uk, Орест Михайлович Сомов, romanized Ukrainian standard: ''Orest Mykhailovych Somov/Somiv'') ( – ) was a Russian romantic writer of Ukrainian origin. He studied at Kharkiv Univer ...
, Oleksa Storozhenko,
Alexandr Pushkin Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin (; rus, links=no, Александр Сергеевич ПушкинIn Reforms of Russian orthography, pre-Revolutionary script, his name was written ., r=Aleksandr Sergeyevich Pushkin, p=ɐlʲɪkˈsandr sʲɪrˈ� ...
, Nikolai Alekseevich Polevoy, Mikhail Lermontov (for his work ''Stuss''), and
Alexander Bestuzhev-Marlinsky Alexander Alexandrovich Bestuzhev ( rus, Алекса́ндр Алекса́ндрович Бесту́жев, p=bʲɪˈstuʐɨf, a=Ru-Alyeksandr Alyeksandrovich Byestuzhyev.oga; (), was a Russian writer and Decembrist. After the Decembrist rev ...
.Horner (2002). ''Neil Cornwell: European Gothic and the 19th-century Gothic literature'', pp. 59–82. 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 both Russian and foreign artists. Some parts of Mikhail Yuryevich Lermontov's " A Hero of Our Time" (1840) are also considered to belong in 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 Pletnyov (russian: Плетнёв; masculine) or Pletnyova (; feminine) is a Russian surname. An alternative spelling is Pletnev. It may refer to the following people: * Andrei Pletnyov (born 1971), Russian football player and referee * Anna Pletnyo ...
's "The Gravedigger" and Lermontov's "
Demon A demon is a malevolent supernatural entity. Historically, belief in demons, or stories about demons, occurs in religion, occultism, literature, fiction, mythology, and folklore; as well as in media such as comics, video games, movies, ...
" (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,
Cossack The Cossacks , es, cosaco , et, Kasakad, cazacii , fi, Kasakat, cazacii , french: cosaques , hu, kozákok, cazacii , it, cosacchi , orv, коза́ки, pl, Kozacy , pt, cossacos , ro, cazaci , russian: казаки́ or ...
lifestyle and, as he was a religious man, Orthodox Christianity. Other relevant authors of this era include
Vladimir Fyodorovich Odoevsky Prince Vladimir Fyodorovich Odoyevsky (russian: Влади́мир Фёдорович Одо́евский, p=ɐˈdojɪfskʲɪj; Владимир Федорович Одоевский. Библиографический указатель. Энц ...
(''The Living Corpse'', written 1838, published 1844, ''The Ghost'', ''The Sylphide'', as well as short stories),
Count Aleksey Konstantinovich Tolstoy Count Aleksey Konstantinovich Tolstoy (russian: Граф Алексе́й Константи́нович Толсто́й; – ), often referred to as A. K. Tolstoy, was a Russian poet, novelist, and playwright. He is considered to be the most ...
(''The Family of the Vourdalak'', 1839, and ''The Vampire'', 1841), Mikhail Zagoskin (''Unexpected Guests''), Józef Sękowski/ Osip Senkovsky (''Antar''), and
Yevgeny Baratynsky Yevgeny Abramovich Baratynsky (russian: Евге́ний Абра́мович Бараты́нский, p=jɪvˈɡʲenʲɪj ɐˈbraməvʲɪtɕ bərɐˈtɨnskʲɪj, a=Yevgyeniy Abramovich Baratynskiy.ru.vorb.oga; 11 July 1844) was lauded by Alexan ...
(''The Ring'').


Nineteenth-century Gothic fiction

By the Victorian era, Gothic had ceased to be the dominant genre for novels in England, partly replaced by more sedate
historical fiction Historical fiction is a literary genre in which the plot takes place in a setting related to the past events, but is fictional. Although the term is commonly used as a synonym for historical fiction literature, it can also be applied to other ty ...
. However, Gothic short stories continued to be popular, published in magazines or as small chapbooks called
penny dreadfuls Penny dreadfuls were cheap popular serial literature produced during the nineteenth century in the United Kingdom. The pejorative term is roughly interchangeable with penny horrible, penny awful, and penny blood. The term typically referred t ...
. 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 madness. 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 George William MacArthur Reynolds (23 July 1814 – 19 June 1879) was a British fiction writer and journalist. Reynolds was born in Sandwich, Kent, the son of Captain Sir George Reynolds, a flag officer of the Royal Navy. Reynolds was educated ...
, known for '' The Mysteries of London'' (1844), ''Faust'' (1846), ''Wagner the Wehr-wolf'' (1847) and ''The Necromancer'' (1857).
Elizabeth Gaskell Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell (''née'' Stevenson; 29 September 1810 – 12 November 1865), often referred to as Mrs Gaskell, was an English novelist, biographer and short story writer. Her novels offer a detailed portrait of the lives of many st ...
'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. In Spain, Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer stood out with his romantic poems and short tales, some of them depicting supernatural events. Today he is considered by some as the most-read writer in Spanish after Miguel de Cervantes. In addition to these short Gothic fictions were some novels which drew on the Gothic.
Emily Brontë Emily Jane Brontë (, commonly ; 30 July 1818 – 19 December 1848) was an English novelist and poet who is best known for her only novel, ''Wuthering Heights'', now considered a classic of English literature. She also published a book of poet ...
'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's Cathy and Charlotte Brontë's '' Jane Eyre'' are examples of female protagonists in such roles.
Louisa May Alcott Louisa May Alcott (; November 29, 1832March 6, 1888) was an American novelist, short story writer, and poet best known as the author of the novel ''Little Women'' (1868) and its sequels ''Little Men'' (1871) and ''Jo's Boys'' (1886). Raised in ...
's Gothic potboiler, '' A Long Fatal Love Chase'' (written in 1866, but published in 1995) is also an interesting specimen of this subgenre. In addition to ''Jane Eyre'', Charlotte Brontë's '' Villette'' also shows Gothic influence. Like other examples of the female Gothic, this book employs the explained supernatural. Throughout the book, a ghostly nun haunts the protagonist, Lucy Snowe. Lucy's friend, a doctor, suggests that the nun is a product of her imagination, but the end of the book reveals that the nun was in fact a disguised suitor coming to visit Ginevra, a friend of Lucy's. Another Gothic feature of ''Villette'' is an anti-Catholic bias. Like other gothic novels, such as Radcliffe's ''The Italian'', it is set in a Catholic country. Lucy Snowe consistently says negative things about Catholicism in general and about specific Catholic people. As an English Protestant, Lucy is very out of place in her Catholic setting. The genre was also a heavy influence on mainstream writers such as Charles Dickens, 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; for example in ''
Oliver Twist ''Oliver Twist; or, The Parish Boy's Progress'', Charles Dickens's second novel, was published as a serial from 1837 to 1839, and as a three-volume book in 1838. Born in a workhouse, the orphan Oliver Twist is bound into apprenticeship with ...
'' (1837–1838), '' Bleak House'' (1854) and ''
Great Expectations ''Great Expectations'' is the thirteenth novel by Charles Dickens and his penultimate completed novel. It depicts the education of an orphan nicknamed Pip (Great Expectations), Pip (the book is a ''bildungsroman''; a coming-of-age story). It ...
'' (1860–1861). These works juxtapose wealthy, ordered and affluent civilisation 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 (Mighall 2007). Miss Havisham from ''Great Expectations'', a bitter recluse who shuts herself away in her gloomy mansion ever since being jilted at the altar on her wedding day, is one of Dickens’ most Gothic characters. 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, but he converted from Catholicism to Anglicanism during his life. In Germany, 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 ''The Rider on the White Horse'' (German: ''Der Schimmelreiter'') is a novella by German writer Theodor Storm. It is his last complete work, first published in 1888, the year of his death. The novella is Storm's best remembered and most widely read ...
'' (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 Grigory Petrovich Danilevsky (russian: Григо́рий Петро́вич Даниле́вский; – ) was a Russian historical novelist, and Privy Councillor of Russia. Danilevsky is well known as the author of the novel ''Beglye v Nov ...
, 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.Butuzov. The 1880s saw the revival of the Gothic as a powerful literary form allied to
fin de siecle A fin is a thin component or appendage attached to a larger body or structure. Fins typically function as foils that produce lift or thrust, or provide the ability to steer or stabilize motion while traveling in water, air, or other fluids. Fin ...
, 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 Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde (16 October 185430 November 1900) was an Irish poet and playwright. After writing in different forms throughout the 1880s, he became one of the most popular playwrights in London in the early 1890s. He is ...
'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 Anglo-Irish people () denotes an ethnic, social and religious grouping who are mostly the descendants and successors of the English Protestant Ascendancy in Ireland. They mostly belong to the Anglican Church of Ireland, which was the establis ...
Protestant Ascendancy. According to literary critic Terry Eagleton, Charles Maturin, Sheridan Le Fanu, and
Bram Stoker Abraham Stoker (8 November 1847 – 20 April 1912) was an Irish author who is celebrated for his 1897 Gothic horror novel '' Dracula''. During his lifetime, he was better known as the personal assistant of actor Sir Henry Irving and busine ...
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 in 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 both Walpole's ''Otranto'' and Radcliffe's ''Udolpho''. Le Fanu's short story collection '' In a Glass Darkly'' (1872) includes the superlative vampire tale ''
Carmilla ''Carmilla'' is an 1872 Gothic fiction, Gothic novella by Irish author Sheridan Le Fanu and one of the early works of vampire fiction, predating Bram Stoker's ''Dracula'' (1897) by 26 years. First published as a Serial (literature), serial in ' ...
'', which provided fresh blood for that particular strand of the Gothic and influenced
Bram Stoker Abraham Stoker (8 November 1847 – 20 April 1912) was an Irish author who is celebrated for his 1897 Gothic horror novel '' Dracula''. During his lifetime, he was better known as the personal assistant of actor Sir Henry Irving and busine ...
's vampire novel ''
Dracula ''Dracula'' is a novel by Bram Stoker, published in 1897. As an epistolary novel, the narrative is related through letters, diary entries, and newspaper articles. It has no single protagonist, but opens with solicitor Jonathan Harker taking ...
'' (1897). Stoker's book not only created the most famous Gothic villain ever, Count Dracula, but also 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 ''The Blood of the Vampire'' is a Gothic novel by Florence Marryat, published in 1897. The protagonist, Harriet Brandt, is a mixed-race psychic vampire who kills unintentionally. The novel follows Harriet after she leaves a Jamaican convent ...
'' 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 medicalised. The vampire, Harriet Brandt, is also a psychic vampire, killing unintentionally. In the United States, two notable late 19th century writers in the Gothic tradition were Ambrose Bierce and Robert W. Chambers. 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). Some works of the Canadian writer Gilbert Parker also fall into the genre, including the stories in ''
The Lane that Had No Turning ''The Lane That Had No Turning'' is a lost 1922 American silent drama film that was directed by Victor Fleming. It was produced by Famous Players-Lasky and released through Paramount Pictures. It is based on the short novel with the same title by ...
'' (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 was not viewed as a genre or label by Russian critics. If used, the word "gothic" was used to describe (mostly early) works of Fyodor Dostoyevsky from the 1880s. Most critics simply 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 considered 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 in the reign of Philip II. The term "Gothic" is sometimes also used to describe the ballads of Russian authors such as
Vasily Andreyevich Zhukovsky Vasily Andreyevich Zhukovsky (russian: Василий Андреевич Жуковский, Vasiliy Andreyevich Zhukovskiy; – ) was the foremost Russian poet of the 1810s and a leading figure in Russian literature in the first half of the 19t ...
, particularly "Ludmila" (1808) and "
Svetlana Svetlana () is a common Orthodox Slavic feminine given name, deriving from the East and South Slavic root ''svet'' (), meaning "light", "shining", "luminescent", "pure", "blessed", or "holy", depending upon context similar if not the same as t ...
" (1813), both translations based on Gottfreid August Burger's Gothic German ballad, " Lenore". During the last years of
Imperial Russia The Russian Empire was an empire and the final period of the List of Russian monarchs, Russian monarchy from 1721 to 1917, ruling across large parts of Eurasia. It succeeded the Tsardom of Russia following the Treaty of Nystad, which ended th ...
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, Leonid Nikolaievich Andreyev, who developed psychological characterization, the symbolist Valery Yakovlevich Bryusov,
Alexander Grin Aleksandr Stepanovich Grinevsky (better known by his pen name, Aleksandr Green / Grin (spelling varies in non-Russian literature), rus, Александр Грин, p=ɐlʲɪˈksandr ɡrʲin, a=Ru-Aleksandr Grin.ogg, 23 August 1880 – 8 July 1932 ...
, Anton Pavlovich Chekhov; and
Aleksandr Ivanovich Kuprin Alexander is a male given name. The most prominent bearer of the name is Alexander the Great, the king of the Ancient Greek kingdom of Macedonia who created one of the largest empires in ancient history. Variants listed here are Aleksandar, Al ...
. 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

Gothic 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 Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde (16 October 185430 November 1900) was an Irish poet and playwright. After writing in different forms throughout the 1880s, he became one of the most popular playwrights in London in the early 1890s. He is ...
's '' The Picture of Dorian Gray'' (1890) initiated a re-working of older literary forms and myths that becomes common in the work of Yeats, Eliot, and Joyce, among others. In Joyce's ''Ulysses'' (1922), the living are transformed into ghosts, which points to an Ireland in stasis at the time, but also 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 literally supernatural elements of 19th century Gothic fiction is indicative of a general form of modernist Gothic writing in the first half of the 20th century. In America,
pulp magazine Pulp magazines (also referred to as "the pulps") were inexpensive fiction magazines that were published from 1896 to the late 1950s. The term "pulp" derives from the cheap wood pulp paper on which the magazines were printed. In contrast, magazine ...
s such as '' Weird Tales'' reprinted classic Gothic horror tales from the previous century, by such authors as Poe,
Arthur Conan Doyle Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle (22 May 1859 – 7 July 1930) was a British writer and physician. He created the character Sherlock Holmes in 1887 for '' A Study in Scarlet'', the first of four novels and fifty-six short stories about Ho ...
, and
Edward Bulwer-Lytton Edward George Earle Lytton Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Baron Lytton, PC (25 May 180318 January 1873) was an English writer and politician. He served as a Whig member of Parliament from 1831 to 1841 and a Conservative from 1851 to 1866. He was Secret ...
, 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), as well as developing a Mythos that would influence Gothic and contemporary horror well into the 21st century. Lovecraft's protégé,
Robert Bloch Robert Albert Bloch (; April 5, 1917September 23, 1994) was an American fiction writer, primarily of crime, psychological horror and fantasy, much of which has been dramatized for radio, cinema and television. He also wrote a relatively small ...
, contributed to ''Weird Tales'' and penned ''
Psycho Psycho may refer to: Mind * Psychopath * Sociopath * Someone with a personality disorder * Someone with a psychological disorder People with the nickname * Karl Amoussou or Psycho, mixed martial artist * Peter Ebdon or Psycho, English snook ...
'' (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 Rebecca, ; Syriac: , ) from the Hebrew (lit., 'connection'), from Semitic root , 'to tie, couple or join', 'to secure', or 'to snare') () appears in the Hebrew Bible as the wife of Isaac and the mother of Jacob and Esau. According to biblical ...
'' (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

The 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, Rhodi Hawk, Tennessee Williams, Truman Capote, Flannery O'Connor, Davis Grubb, Anne Rice,
Harper Lee Nelle Harper Lee (April 28, 1926February 19, 2016) was an American novelist best known for her 1960 novel ''To Kill a Mockingbird''. It won the 1961 Pulitzer Prize and has become a classic of modern American literature. Lee has received numero ...
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 Dorothy Enid Eden (3 April 1912 – 4 March 1982) was a New Zealand novelist and short story writer, principally in the Gothic genre. Early life Eden was born in North Canterbury, New Zealand, Canterbury but she grew up in the area of El ...
,
Victoria Holt Eleanor Alice Hibbert (née Burford; 1 September 1906 – 18 January 1993) was an English writer of historical romances. She was a prolific writer who published several books a year in different literary genres, each genre under a different pen ...
,
Barbara Michaels Barbara Louise Mertz (September 29, 1927 – August 8, 2013) was an American author who wrote under her own name as well as under the pseudonyms Elizabeth Peters and Barbara Michaels. In 1952, she received a PhD in Egyptology from the Univers ...
, Mary Stewart,
Alicen White Alice Margaret Geddes White (28 April 1908 – 3 August 2007), also known as Alicen White, was a British-American writer, playwright, editor, teacher and performer. She was on the staff of Girl Scouts of the USA for over 25 years. Early life a ...
and Jill Tattersall. Many featured covers showing a terror-stricken woman in diaphanous attire in front of a gloomy
castle A castle is a type of fortified structure built during the Middle Ages predominantly by the nobility or royalty and by military orders. Scholars debate the scope of the word ''castle'', but usually consider it to be the private fortified r ...
, 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. Apart from imprints like Love Spell, discontinued in 2010, very few books seem to embrace the term these days.


Contemporary Gothic

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,
Stella Coulson Stella or STELLA may refer to: Art, entertainment, and media Comedy *Stella (comedy group), a comedy troupe consisting of Michael Showalter, Michael Ian Black and David Wain Characters *Stella (given name), including a list of characters with th ...
, Susan Hill, Billy Martin and
Neil Gaiman Neil Richard MacKinnon GaimanBorn as Neil Richard Gaiman, with "MacKinnon" added on the occasion of his marriage to Amanda Palmer. ; ( Neil Richard Gaiman; born 10 November 1960) is an English author of short fiction, novels, comic books, gr ...
, and in some works by
Stephen King Stephen Edwin King (born September 21, 1947) is an American author of horror, supernatural fiction, suspense, crime, science-fiction, and fantasy novels. Described as the "King of Horror", a play on his surname and a reference to his high s ...
. Thomas M. Disch's novel ''The Priest'' (1994) was subtitled ''A Gothic Romance'', and partly modelled on Matthew Lewis' ''The Monk''. Many writers such as Billy Martin, Stephen King and particularly Clive Barker have focused on the surface of the body and the visuality of blood. England's Rhiannon Ward is among recent writers of Gothic fiction. Contemporary American writers in the tradition include
Joyce Carol Oates Joyce Carol Oates (born June 16, 1938) is an American writer. Oates published her first book in 1963, and has since published 58 novels, a number of plays and novellas, and many volumes of short stories, poetry, and non-fiction. Her novels '' Bla ...
in such novels as ''
Bellefleur ''Bellefleur'' (1980) is a magic realist novel by American writer Joyce Carol Oates about the generations of an upstate New York family. It is the first book in Oates' "Gothic Saga" and at the time of publication represented a major departure ...
'' and ''A Bloodsmoor Romance'' and short story collections such as ''Night-Side'' (Skarda 1986b), and
Raymond Kennedy Ray Kennedy (1951–2021) was an English footballer for Arsenal and Liverpool. Ray or Raymond Kennedy may also refer to: * Raymond Kennedy (novelist) (1934–2008), American novelist * Raymond Louis Kennedy (1946–2014), singer-songwriter and mu ...
in his novel ''Lulu Incognito''. A number of Gothic traditions have also developed in New Zealand (with the subgenre referred to as New Zealand Gothic or Maori Gothic) and
Australia Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a sovereign ''Sovereign'' is a title which can be applied to the highest leader in various categories. The word is borrowed from Old French , which is ultimately derived from the L ...
(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 ''Gould's Book of Fish: A Novel in Twelve Fish'' is a 2001 novel by Tasmanian author Richard Flanagan. ''Gould's Book of Fish'' was Flanagan's third novel. Plot summary ''Gould's Book of Fish'' is a fictionalised account of the convict William ...
'' by
Richard Flanagan Richard Miller Flanagan (born 1961) is an Australian writer, who has also worked as a film director and screenwriter. He won the 2014 Man Booker Prize for his novel '' The Narrow Road to the Deep North''. Flanagan was described by the ''Washing ...
and '' The Roving Party'' by Rohan Wilson. Southern Ontario Gothic applies a similar sensibility to a Canadian cultural context. Robertson Davies, Alice Munro,
Barbara Gowdy Barbara Gowdy, CM (born 25 June 1950) is a Canadian novelist and short story writer. Born in Windsor, Ontario, she is the long-time partner of poet Christopher Dewdney and resides in Toronto. Literary career Gowdy's novel '' Falling Angels'' ...
, Timothy Findley and
Margaret Atwood Margaret Eleanor Atwood (born November 18, 1939) is a Canadian poet, novelist, literary critic, essayist, teacher, environmental activist, and inventor. Since 1961, she has published 18 books of poetry, 18 novels, 11 books of non-fiction, nin ...
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 The representation of gender in horror films, particularly depictions of women, has been the subject of critical commentary. Critics and researchers have argued that horror films depict graphically detailed violence, contain erotically or sexu ...
" genre. 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 In common usage, climate change describes global warming—the ongoing increase in global average temperature—and its effects on Earth's climate system. Climate change in a broader sense also includes previous long-term changes to ...
and the planet's ecological future. Among the bestselling books of the 21st century, the
YA novel Young adult fiction (YA) is a category of fiction written for readers from 12 to 18 years of age. While the genre is primarily targeted at adolescents, approximately half of YA readers are adults. The subject matter and genres of YA correlate ...
'' Twilight'' by Stephenie Meyer, is now increasingly identified as a Gothic novel, as is
Carlos Ruiz Zafón Carlos Ruiz Zafón (; 25 September 1964 – 19 June 2020) was a Spanish novelist known for his 2001 novel ''La sombra del viento'' ('' The Shadow of the Wind''). Biography Ruiz Zafón was born in Barcelona. His grandparents had worked in a ...
's 2001 novel ''
The Shadow of the Wind ''The Shadow of the Wind'' ( es, La sombra del viento) is a 2001 novel by the Spanish writer Carlos Ruiz Zafón and a worldwide bestseller. The book was translated into English in 2004 by Lucia Graves and sold over a million copies in the UK aft ...
''.


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 American International Pictures (AIP) is an American motion picture production label of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. In its original operating period, AIP was an independent film production and distribution company known for producing and releasing fil ...
. In
Hindi cinema Hindi cinema, popularly known as Bollywood and formerly as Bombay cinema, refers to the film industry based in Mumbai, engaged in production of motion pictures in Hindi language. The popular term Bollywood, is a portmanteau of "Bombay" (fo ...
, 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 DC Comics, Inc. (doing business as DC) is an American comic book publisher and the flagship unit of DC Entertainment, a subsidiary of Warner Bros. Discovery. DC Comics is one of the largest and oldest American comic book companies, with their f ...
' '' The Dark Mansion of Forbidden Love'' and ''
The Sinister House of Secret Love ''Secrets of Sinister House'' was a horror-suspense anthology comic book series published by DC Comics from 1972–1974, a companion to ''Forbidden Tales of Dark Mansion''. Both series were originally inspired by the successful ABC soap opera ...
'', Charlton Comics' ''
Haunted Love ''Haunted Love'' was a horror-romance anthology comic book series published by American company Charlton Comics from 1973 to 1975. It was part of the Gothic Romance comic book mini-trend of the era, which included the short-lived DC Comics series ...
'', Curtis Magazines' ''Gothic Tales of Love'', and Atlas/Seaboard Comics'
one-shot One shot may refer to: Film and television * One-shot film, a feature film shot in one long take with no edits, or manufactured to look like so * ''One Shot'' (2005 film), a Sri Lankan action film directed by Ranjan Ramanayake * ''One Shot'' (2 ...
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''. The album recognized as initiating the goth music genre is '' Unknown Pleasures'' by the band Joy Division, although earlier bands such The Velvet Underground also contributed to the genre's distinctive style. Themes from Gothic writers such as H. P. Lovecraft were used among
Gothic rock Gothic rock (also called goth rock or simply goth) is a style of rock music that emerged from post-punk in the United Kingdom in the late 1970s. The first post-punk bands which shifted toward dark music with gothic overtones include Siouxsie a ...
and heavy metal bands, especially in
black metal Black metal is an extreme metal, extreme subgenre of heavy metal music. Common traits include Tempo#Beats per minute, fast tempos, a Screaming (music)#Black metal, shrieking vocal style, heavily distorted Electric guitar, guitars played with t ...
, thrash metal (
Metallica Metallica is an American heavy metal band. The band was formed in 1981 in Los Angeles by vocalist/guitarist James Hetfield and drummer Lars Ulrich, and has been based in San Francisco for most of its career. The band's fast tempos, instrume ...
's ''The Call of Ktulu''),
death metal Death metal is an extreme subgenre of heavy metal music. It typically employs heavily distorted and low-tuned guitars, played with techniques such as palm muting and tremolo picking; deep growling vocals; aggressive, powerful drumming, feat ...
, and
gothic metal Gothic metal (or goth metal) is a fusion genre combining the aggression of heavy metal with the dark atmospheres of gothic rock. The music of gothic metal is diverse with bands known to adopt the gothic approach to different styles of heavy met ...
. For example, heavy metal musician King Diamond delights in telling stories full of horror, theatricality,
Satanism Satanism is a group of ideological and philosophical beliefs based on Satan. Contemporary religious practice of Satanism began with the founding of the atheistic Church of Satan by Anton LaVey in the United States in 1966, although a few hi ...
and
anti-Catholicism Anti-Catholicism is hostility towards Catholics or opposition to the Catholic Church, its clergy, and/or its adherents. At various points after the Reformation, some majority Protestant states, including England, Prussia, Scotland, and the Uni ...
in his compositions. 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 of all time 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 ''Changeling: The Dreaming'' is a tabletop role-playing game originally published by White Wolf Publishing in July 1995, and is part of the '' World of Darkness'' series. Player characters are changelings, fae souls reborn into human bodies, a ...
'', 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 relationship Relational aggression or alternative aggressionSimmons, Rachel (2002). ''Odd Girl Out: The Hidden Culture of Aggression in Girls''. New York, New York: Mariner Books. pp. 8–9. . Retrieved 2016-11-02. is a type of aggression in which harm is cause ...
s, 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 ''Castlevania'' (), known in Japan as is a gothic horror action-adventure video game series and media franchise about Dracula (Castlevania), Dracula, created and developed by Konami. It has been released on various platforms, from early system ...
'' 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 ''Ghosts 'n Goblins'', known in Japan as , is a run-and-gun platform video game series created by Tokuro Fujiwara and developed by Capcom. The first entry in the series was '' Ghosts 'n Goblins'', released in arcades on July 7, 1985. The se ...
'', feature a camper parody of Gothic fiction. '' Resident Evil 7: Biohazard'' in 2017 involves an action hero and his wife trapped in a creepy plantation and mansion owned by a family with sinister and hideous secrets, solving puzzles, fighting enemies, and a terrifying visions of a ghostly mutant in the shape of a little girl. This was followed by 2021's '' Resident Evil Village'', a dark fantasy sequel focusing on a village under the control of a bizarre Satanic cult, with werewolves, vampires and shapeshifters, solving puzzles and exploring secret passages, and a mysterious dollhouse where a dollmaker uses her powers through controlling dolls. '' Bloodborne'' takes place in the decaying Gothic city of Yharnam, where the player must face down werewolves, shambling mutants, vampires, witches and numerous other Gothic staple creatures. The game takes a marked turn midway however, shifting from gothic horror to Lovecraftian horror. Popular tabletop card game '' Magic the Gathering'', known for its
parallel universe Parallel universe often refers to parallel universes in fiction, a self-contained separate world, universe or reality coexisting with the real world, which is used as a recurring plot point or setting used in fantasy and science fiction. Parallel ...
consisting of "planes", features the plane known as
Innistrad The Innistrad block is a block of the collectible card game ''Magic: The Gathering'', consisting of the expansion sets ''Innistrad'' (September 30, 2011), ''Dark Ascension'' (February 3, 2012) and ''Avacyn Restored'' (May 4, 2012). Innistrad is ...
. Its general aesthetic appears to be based on northeast European Gothic horror. Cultists, ghosts, vampires, werewolves, and zombies are common denizens of Innistrad. Modern Gothic horror films include '' Sleepy Hollow'', '' Interview with the Vampire'', '' Underworld'', ''
The Wolfman In folklore, a werewolf (), or occasionally lycanthrope (; ; uk, Вовкулака, Vovkulaka), is an individual that can shapeshift into a wolf (or, especially in modern film, a therianthropic hybrid wolf-like creature), either purposely o ...
'', '' From Hell'', '' Dorian Gray'', '' Let The Right One In'', ''
The Woman in Black ''The Woman in Black'' is a 1983 gothic horror novel by English writer Susan Hill. The plot concerns a mysterious spectre that haunts a small English town. A television film based on the story, also called '' The Woman in Black'', was produ ...
'', and '' Crimson Peak''. 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 been called Gothic as well – 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 Carol A. Senf is professor and associate chair in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication at the Georgia Institute of Technology. With four books, two critical editions, one edited essay collection, and various critical essays, she is a ...
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 hold sway in the world." As such, the Gothic helps students better understand their own 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

*
American Gothic fiction American gothic fiction is a subgenre of gothic fiction. Elements specific to American Gothic include: rationality versus the irrational, puritanism, guilt, the uncanny (''das unheimliche''), ab-humans, ghosts, and monsters. Analysis of major th ...
*
Eighteenth-century Gothic novel The eighteenth-century Gothic novel is a genre of Gothic fiction published between 1764 and roughly 1820, which had the greatest period of popularity in the 1790s. These works originated the term "Gothic" to refer to stories which evoked the senti ...
*
French Revolution and the English Gothic Novel The French Revolution greatly influenced the development of the English gothic novel. In the early phase of the French Revolution, the British viewed developments favorably in the hopeful expectation that the French would establish a constituti ...
* Gothic film *
Gothic romance film The Gothic romance film is a Gothic film with femininity, feminine appeal. Diane Waldman wrote in ''Cinema Journal'' that Gothic films in general "permitted the articulation of feminine fear, anger, and distrust of the patriarchal order" and that ...
* Gothic Western *
Irish Gothic literature Irish Gothic literature developed in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Most of the writers were Anglo-Irish. The period from 1691 to 1800 was marked by the dominance of the Protestant Ascendancy, Anglo-Irish families of the Church of Ireland ...
* List of gothic fiction works * List of Minerva Press authors * Minerva Press * Southern Gothic * Southern Ontario Gothic *
Suburban Gothic Suburban Gothic is a subgenre of Gothic fiction, art, film and television, focused on anxieties associated with the creation of suburban communities, particularly in the United States and the West, from the 1950s and 1960s onwards. Criteria It o ...
* Tasmanian Gothic * Urban Gothic * Weird fiction


Notes


References

* * *Baldick, Chris (1993), ''Introduction,'' in ''The Oxford Book of Gothic Tales'', Oxford: Oxford University Press * Birkhead, Edith (1921), ''The Tale of Terror'' *Bloom, Clive (2007), ''Gothic Horror: A Guide for Students and Readers'', Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan *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'' *Charnes, Linda (2010), ''Shakespeare and the Gothic Strain'', Vol. 38, pp. 185 *Clery, E.J. (1995), ''The Rise of Supernatural Fiction'', Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press Cambridge University Press is the university press of the University of Cambridge. Granted letters patent by Henry VIII of England, King Henry VIII in 1534, it is the oldest university press in the world. It is also the King's Printer. Cambr ...
. *Cornwell, Neil (1999), ''The Gothic-Fantastic in Nineteenth-Century Russian Literature'', Amsterdam: Atlanta, GA: Rodopi, Studies in Slavic Literature and Poetics, volume 33 *Cook, Judith (1980), ''Women in Shakespeare'', London: Harrap & Co. Ltd *Cusack A., Barry M. (2012), ''Popular Revenants: The German Gothic and Its International Reception, 1800–2000'', Camden House *Davenport-Hines, Richard (1998), ''Gothic: 400 Years of Excess, Horror, Evil and Ruin'', London: Fourth Estate *Davison, Carol Margaret (2009), ''Gothic Literature 1764–1824'', Cardiff: University of Wales Press *Drakakis, John & Dale Townshend (2008), ''Gothic Shakespeares'', New York: Routledge *
Eagleton, Terry Terence Francis Eagleton (born 22 February 1943) is an English literary theorist, critic, and public intellectual. He is currently Distinguished Professor of English Literature at Lancaster University. Eagleton has published over forty books ...
(1995), ''Heathcliff and the Great Hunger'', New York: Verso *Fuchs, Barbara (2004), ''Romance'', London: Routledge *Gamer, Michael (2006), ''Romanticism and the Gothic. Genre, Reception and Canon Formation'', Cambridge: Cambridge University Press *Gibbons, Luke (2004), ''Gaelic Gothic'', Galway: Arlen House * Gilbert, Sandra and
Susan Gubar Susan D. Gubar (born November 30, 1944) is an American author and distinguished Professor Emerita of English and Women's Studies at Indiana University. She is best known for co-authoring the landmark feminist literary study '' The Madwoman in t ...
(1979), '' The Madwoman in the Attic''. * Goulart, Ron (1986), "The Pulps" in Jack Sullivan, ed., ''The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural: 337-40'' *Grigorescu, George (2007), ''Long Journey Inside The Flesh'', Bucharest, Romania *Hadji, Robert (1986), "Jean Ray" in Jack Sullivan, ed., ''The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural'' *Haggerty, George (2006), ''Queer Gothic'', Urbana, IL: Illinois UP *Halberstam, Jack (1995), ''Skin Shows'', Durham, NC: Duke UP *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 *Horner, Avril (2002), ''European Gothic: A Spirited Exchange 1760–1960'', Manchester & New York:
Manchester University Press Manchester University Press is the university press of the University of Manchester, England and a publisher of academic books and journals. Manchester University Press has developed into an international publisher. It maintains its links with th ...
*Hughes, William, ''Historical Dictionary of Gothic Literature'', Scarecrow Press, 2012 *Jackson, Rosemary (1981), ''Fantasy: The Literature of Subversion'' *Kilgour, Maggie (1995), ''The Rise of the Gothic Novel'', London: Routledge *Jürgen Klein (1975), ''Der Gotische Roman und die Ästhetik des Bösen'', Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft *Jürgen Klein, Gunda Kuttler (2011), ''Mathematik des Begehrens'', Hamburg: Shoebox House Verlag *Korovin, Valentin I. (1988), ''Fantasticheskii mir russkoi romanticheskoi povesti'' *Medina, Antoinette (2007), ''A Vampires Vedas'' *Mighall, Robert (2003), ''A Geography of Victorian Gothic Fiction: Mapping History's Nightmares'', Oxford: Oxford University Press *Mighall, Robert (2007), "Gothic Cities", in C. Spooner and E. McEvoy, eds, ''The Routledge Companion to Gothic'', London: Routledge, pp. 54–72 *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 *Peterson, Dale (1987), The Slavic and East European Journal, Vol. 31, No. 1 (Spring, 1987), pp. 36–49 *Punter, David (1996), ''The Literature of Terror'', London: Longman (2 volumes) *Punter, David (2004), ''The Gothic'', London: Wiley-Blackwell *Sabor, Peter & Paul Yachnin (2008), ''Shakespeare and the Eighteenth Century'', Ashgate Publishing Ltd *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 *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: 178-9'' *Skarda, Patricia (1986b), "Oates, Joyce Carol" in Jack Sullivan ed. (1986), ''The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural: 303-4'' *Stevens, David (2000), ''The Gothic Tradition'', * Sullivan, Jack, ed. (1986), '' The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural'' * Summers, Montague (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


External links

*
Gothic Fiction at the British LibraryKey motifs in Gothic Fiction
– a British Library film
Gothic Fiction Bookshelf at Project Gutenberg''Irish Journal of Gothic and Horror Studies''Gothic author biographiesThe Gothic Imagination

"Gothic"
''In Our Time'', BBC Radio 4 discussion with Chris Baldick, A.N. Wilson and Emma Clery (Jan. 4, 2001) {{Romance novel 1760s neologisms Fantasy genres Literary genres