Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Gothic
Conventions
- The
vampire
- The female vampire
- 'Now that she is a women she must have
men'
- 'this beautiful and ghastly
lady'
- 'The lovely bloodstained lips'
- 'A deliberate voluptuousness which was both thrilling and repulsive'
- Carmilla
- Sheridan
LeFanu
- 1872
- influenced dracula
- Female vampire
- Explored taboos
- lesbianism
- Queen Victoria refused to believe it existed
- 'All claws and teeth'
- 'Count Dracula is the personification of the undead'-John
McRae
- 'Combines fears and fantasies of
consumption'
- The
Vampyre
- 1819
- John
Polidori
- First english vampire
story
- 'Whether man or beast i could not
tell'
- 'My bountiful wine-press for a
while'
- 'In the face of the voluptuous and violent sexuality
loosed by the decadently licentious vampire, a
vigorous sense of patriarchal, bourgeois and
family values is restored'-Fred Botting
- The
conscious/sub-conscious
- 'The beautiful Somnambulist'
- 'He lies half dreaming,
half waking'
- 'It is wonderful what tricks our dreams play
on us, and how conveniently we can imagine'
- 'We thought her dying whist she
slept and sleeping when she died'
- 'I thought at the time I must be
dreaming'
- The monk
- Matthew
Lewis
- 1796
- Monster in his
dream
- 'The sleep of reason produces
monsters'
- Goya
- Painting
- 1799
- 'The
Nightmare'
- Henry
Fuseli
- 1781
- La Belle Dame Sans
Merci
- John
Keats
- 1820
- Sleep/Death
- Ambiguity between Sleep
and death
- Reality/Dreams
- Characters try to
rationalise the
supernatural with
dreams/imagination
- 'Dreams are controlled
reality'-John McRae
- 'The gothic is about
imagination'-John
McRae
- 'Like a sort of awful nightmare'
- Transgression
- Consequences of
transgression
- 'I must bear this mark of shame on my head
until judgement day'
- 'As he had placed the wafer on minas
forehead, it had seared it'
- Knowledge
- 'I opened the doors of that
bookcase'
- 'My dark newborn
curiosity'
- 'I want to keep up with Jonathan's
studies'
- 'I took the forbidden key from the
heap'
- 'One false step and into the
abyss of the dark you
stumble'
- Breaking of boundaries or breaking of
rules in society
- 'All the laws that governed sexual identity and behaviour
seemed to be breaking down'-Elaine Showalter
- 'The key to my enfer'
- 'It has at its core
transgression'- John McRae
- female roles
- Female sexual
desire
- 'The lovely bloodstained
lips'
- Male desire
- 'She was the child of his desire'
- 'A wicked burning desire that
they would kiss me with those
lips'
- 'The sweetest singers he will keep in cages'
- 'Thrust his verile member into the dead girl'
- 'It is dinner time, it is bed time'
- 'Under a spell'
- Female sexual desire presented as
supernatural and therefore other'
- 'Eyes unclean and full of hell-fire
instead of the pure gentle orbs we
knew'
- 'A strange change which i had noticed in the night'
- 'I fall down for him'
- Fallen woman
- 'She laughed him full in the face'
- 'Undermined social stability'
(the new woman) David
Rodgers
- The helpless
Maiden
- 'A brave mans blood is the best thing on
this earth when a woman is in trouble'
- 'They were made by miss
lucy'
- Lucy no longer restricted to gender roles
as she is undead. By biting the children
she rejects the female maternal role
presenting her as both other and
monstrous
- Setting
- 'The
castle'
- 'She herself is a haunted
house'
- 'He lives in a gloomy
mansion'
- 'The castle stood as before,
reared high above the
waste of desolation'
- 'A house of death'
(Hillingham)
- 'There was something wild
and uncanny about the
place'
- 'The castle of Dracula now stood
out against the red sky'
- The Castle Of
Otranto
- 1764
- Horace
Walpole
- 'Labyrinth of
darkness'
- Considered to be one of the first gothic
novels
- often
isolated
- The Woman In Black
- Susan Hill
- 1983
- Rebecca
- 1938
- Daphne du
Maurier
- The fall of the House of
Usher
- Edgar Allan
Poe
- 1840
- Castles/houses often reflect the characteristics of the
occupant
- 'The entire haunted castle is
hyper-organic in all its
aspects, and therefore serves
almost as a character in the
text'-Wendy Fall
- 'The castle is a veritable prison, and I am a
prisoner!'
- The
forrest
- 'The forest closed upon her like a pair of jaws'
- 'The woods enclose and then
enclose again, like a system of
Chinese boxes'
- ''She knew the forest too
well to fear it but she must
always be on her guard'
- 'You are
always in
danger in
the
forrest'
- 'A sea of green tree
tops'
- 'We don't control anything nature controls everything'-John
McRae
- The unknown
- The
excessive
- 'Gothic is the writing of excess'-Fred
Botting
- 'Too many roses. Too
many'
- 'Obscene in their
excess'
- 'She is so beautiful she is
unatural'
- 'Why can't the let a girl marry three men or as
many as want her'
- The
monstrous
- 'Nothing about him reminded me of
humanity'
- 'The worst wolves are hairy on
the inside'
- 'He believes himself to be both
less and more than a man'
- 'Whether man or beast i could not
tell'
- 'Licked her lips like an
animal'
- 'The thing in the coffin
writhed'
- 'Wolves are deep in the psychology of
Europe'-John McRae
- The Monk
- 1796
- Matthew
Lewis
- Frankenstein
- Mary
Shelley
- 1818
- Death
- Death/beauty
- 'Death had given back part of
her beauty'
- Victorian depiction of death as
beautiful
- paintings and photographs of the
dead
- 'A girl who is both
death and the
maiden'
- 'The wounds on the throat
had absolutely disappeared'
- Death gives lucy power as she is no
longer restricted to gender roles
and there is no longer male
influence over her as the wounds
represent draculas power over her
- General ideas
- 'stock characters and devices which are simply recycled
from one text to the next'
- 'The gothic faces our primal fears'-John Mcrae
- The supernatural
- 'Nothing human lives here'
- 'She is so beautiful she is unatural'
- 'I saw a faint flickering blue flame'
- The monk
- accepted supernatural
- presented as part of the supernatural
- 'the literary supernatural becomes an element in a greater conversation
about human imagination, and the secrets of the human mind, and the
nature of human existence as a spiritual creature, not merely a biological
organism'- Wendy Fall