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Gothic Literature

Explore Gothic and Romanticism in literature. Learn about the gothic aesthetic, Romantic ideals, literary motifs, and key writers like Poe and Hawthorne. Dive into compelling stories of horror and the supernatural.

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Gothic Literature

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  1. Gothic Literature

  2. Rhetorical Terms Quiz #1 • 1st page of glossary • 10/15-16

  3. What is “Gothic”? • Define “gothic” in your own words. • What multiple definitions can you think of?

  4. Romanticism • The predominance of imagination over reason and formal rules • Primitivism- Belief that primitive cultures are superior to modern cultures • Love of nature • An interest in the past • Mysticism- Belief in a reality passing normal human understanding • Individualism • Idealization of rural life • Enthusiasm for the wild, irregular, or grotesque in nature

  5. Romanticism • Enthusiasm for the uncivilized or “natural” • Interest in human rights • Sentimentality • Melancholy • Interest in the gothic

  6. Gothic vs. Romanticism Romantic writers celebrated the beauties of nature. Gothic writers were peering into the darkness at the supernatural. • Romanticism developed as a reaction against the rationalism of the Age of Reason. • The romantics freed the imagination from the hold of reason, so they could follow their imagination wherever it might lead. • For some Romantics, when they looked at the individual, they saw hope (think “A Psalm of Life”). • For some Romantic writers, the imagination led to the threshold of the unknown—the shadowy region where the fantastic, the demonic and the insane reside. • When the Gothic's saw the individual, they saw the potential of evil.

  7. Gothic Literature • Began in the mid to late 18th century in Britian • devoted primarily to stories of horror, the fantastic, and the "darker" supernatural forces. • The short stories we will read during this until all belong to the American gothic genre.

  8. named for Gothic medieval cathedrals which often feature savage or grotesque ornaments • the cathedrals are covered with a profusion of wild carvings depicting humanity in conflict with supernatural forces—demons, angels, gargoyles, and monsters. • “Gothic" derives from "Goth," the name of one of the barbaric Germanic tribes that invaded the Roman Empire

  9. Gothic architecture evokes the sense of humanity’s division between a finite, physical identity and the often terrifying and bizarre forces of the infinite. The Gothic aesthetic suggests an ambition to transcend earthly human limitations and reach the divine.

  10. American Gothic • Mid 19th century • Edgar Allan Poe • Nathaniel Hawthorne • Washington Irvine • Charles Brockden Brown

  11. Supernatural/Gothic Literary Motifs A motif is a repeated theme, image, or literary device. Look for these common motifs as we read the pieces in this unit.

  12. American Gothic Motifs • Motif-recurring theme, image, symbol, or other literary device • Common gothic motifs: • Irrational vs. the rational • Guilt • Signs/Omens • And many more, but these are the ones we’ll be looking at this six weeks.

  13. Signs/Omens: Reveal the intervention of cosmic forces and often represent psychological or spiritual conflict (e.g., flashes of lightning and violent storms might parallel some turmoil within a character’s mind).

  14. Rational vs. Irrational • The main character is often torn between a rational, scientific world, and a supernatural world that cannot be explained. The character may become consumed and driven insane by attempting to explain this irrational world.

  15. Guilt • Often, a main character’s guilt, real or self-created, overwhelms the character causing death or insanity.

  16. Writing Warm Up #2 • Speaking of guilt, have you ever done something that you felt so guilty for that you confessed before anyone found you out?

  17. “The Tell-Tale Heart” • 1843 • Edgar Allen Poe • As we read: • Syntax • Narrator • Motifs

  18. Homework • Read “The Tell-Tale Heart” • Complete the syntax activity. • Write a one page reflection over how Poe’s use of syntax affects his characterization. • Update your tracing motifs chart.

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