A
- Abhuman: Something only vestigially human and possibly in the process of becoming something monstrous.
- Antihero: A fundamentally flawed protagonist.
- Age of Reason: See 'Enlightenment'.
B
C
D
- Doppleganger: A double, mirror image or alter ego of a character.
E
- Enlightenment: A European intellectual movement of the 18th century emphasising individualism rather than tradition.
- Excess: Hyperbole.
F
G
H
- Horror: Fear generated by physical shock.
I
J
K
L
- Liminal: Refers to the experience of being on a threshold or a boundary.
M
N
O
- Obscurity: Darkness, fogginess, confusion and things not seen or understood clearly.
- Oppositions: Binary opposites e.g. good/evil.
- Otherness: Anything different from ourselves.
P
Q
R
- Revenant: Term used to describe the past or 'what comes back'.
S
- Sublime: A sense of awe, astonishment, of being overwhelmed in the face of something much bigger than ourselves.
- Supernatural: Above nature, mysterious and inexplicable.
T
- Taboos: Cultural, moral or religious rules which are violated.
- Terror: Fear generated through uncertainty and the obscure.
- Transgression: Breaking moral boundaries.
U
- Uncanny: The strange, eerie or mysterious.
V
W
X
Y
Z
A2 English Literature
Thursday, 10 September 2015
Introduction to the Gothic
The gothic genre typically has many obvious conventions and concepts which are used frequently throughout many different gothic novels and stories.
Gothic Concepts
- Horror and Terror
- The Sublime
- The Uncanny
- Taboos
- The Supernatural or Preternatural
- Oppositions
- Otherness
- Obscurity
- The Revenant
- The Doppleganger
- The Liminal
- Abhuman
- Antihero
- Transgression
- Excess
History of the Gothic
Gothic Concepts
- Horror and Terror
- The Sublime
- The Uncanny
- Taboos
- The Supernatural or Preternatural
- Oppositions
- Otherness
- Obscurity
- The Revenant
- The Doppleganger
- The Liminal
- Abhuman
- Antihero
- Transgression
- Excess
History of the Gothic
The Gothic genre began in the late 18th century and began the Age of Reason (or Enlightenment). It can also be seen as a response to the French revolution or revolution in general. It is often seen as a genre of excess and is thought to have begun with Horace Walpole's The Castle of Otranto.
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