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You don’t know Poe

You don’t know Poe. A Brief Overview of the Master of American Horror. Early LIfe. Edgar Allan Poe was born in Boston, Mass., in 1809, while his parents, who were traveling actors, were on tour. In 1826, he attended the University of Virginia.

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You don’t know Poe

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  1. You don’t know Poe A Brief Overview of the Master of American Horror

  2. Early LIfe • Edgar Allan Poe was born in Boston, Mass., in 1809, while his parents, who were traveling actors, were on tour. • In 1826, he attended the University of Virginia. • He was bad with money his entire life. He was ashamed of this. • He gambled to raise money, and ended up burning his furniture for firewood while at school.

  3. Edgar Allan Poe Daguerrotype of Poe, by Edwin H. Manchester, 1848.

  4. EARLY TRAGEDIES • Poe discovered his fiancée in Richmond, Virginia, had become engaged to another. • He also learned that his beloved adopted mother, Frances Allan, was dying of tuberculosis. She summoned him home, but passed away before he had the chance to see her. • Poe enrolled at West Point to become a soldier and pursue a life of adventure. He was thrown out after 8 months. • He had already published a book of poetry by age 18.

  5. MORE WEIRDNESS • Poe’s adoptive father died and left him out of his will, leaving his inheritance to an as-yet-unknown illegitimate child instead. • Poe had moved from Baltimore to Richmond and began publishing short stories and working at the Southern Literary Messenger. • He was known for his brilliant but totally scathing book reviews—usually pitted against the “Northern” literary establishment. • He married his young cousin Virginia Clemm, when she was thirteen years old.

  6. Virginia clemm Portrait of Virginia Clemm by either William Morrison Hughes or George Caleb Bingham.

  7. SUCCESS & SADNESS • Poe continued to work as a respected editor and writer (of fiction and essays) for years. • In 1842, Virginia contracted tuberculosis. • Poe published the poem “The Raven” in 1845 and became a household name. • They decided to leave New York amongst rumors that Poe was involved with a married woman. • Virginia died in the winter of 1847, at the age of 24. Poe was depressed for months.

  8. dying • Poe did not outlast his wife for long. • Within two years of her death, Poe decided to travel to Virginia to woo his former fiancée. • On this trip, he disappeared for five days. • He was discovered in a bar in Baltimore by a magazine editor friend and was checked into the hospital. • He died after five days, on October 7, 1849. He was 40 years old.

  9. Poe’s Fiction • Though he is most popular for his poetry, Poe’s fiction was completely revolutionary. • Largely inspired by European masters (just like his contemporary, Hawthorne), Poe introduced Gothic motifs into American literature. • Gothic fiction originated in Europe with the publication of The Castle of Otranto by Horace Walpole. • It is an extension of Romanticism, a literary movement that emphasized imagination, emotions, natural imagery, and a reflective sense of melancholy.

  10. WHAT is “gothic”? Duomo, Milan, Italy, first built in 1386.

  11. WHAT IS “GOTHIC”?

  12. HOW IS POE “GOTHIC”? • Poe writes a lot about horror, suspense, with high-intensity and often unreliable narration, death, grotesquerie, and mayhem. • What is “the grotesque”? • While we read “The Fall of the House of Usher” and other Poe works, think about how these features describe his writing. • “In the realm of the short story, Poe was a prophet, peering into the next age, rather than a leader of his own time.” —The Cambridge History of American Literature

  13. Works Cited • “Daguerrotype of Edgar Allan Poe.” Wikipedia. 22 Jun 2014. • “Gothic Fiction.” Wikipedia. 22 Jun 2014. • “Poe’s Life.” Poe Museum. Poemuseum.org. 22 Jun 2014. • “Romanticism.” Merriam-Webster. Merriam-Webster.com. 22 Jun 2014. • Throgmorton, Cathy. “Bingham’s Best Student on Display at Central Methodist University.” The Columbia Daily Tribune. 11 Jun 2013.

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