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BLASZAK, Masek. Ann Radcliffe’s Gothic Romances and the Romantic Revival.

BLASZAK, Masek. Ann Radcliffe’s Gothic Romances and the Romantic Revival.

Some Remarks on the origins of the Gothic Romance and its status in Literary Criticism:

Bacon’s Novum Organum (1620): reality continued to the reasonable supported by his disciple Thomas Hobbes. This scientific spirit, know in England as “age of understanding”, culminates with John Locke and his Essays (1690) which dominated most of the thinking in the 18th century. [empiricism, cartesianism power of reason and the immutability in the order of nature represented the main thought]

The cultivation of rationality, clarity and simplicity, regularity, symmetry and balance, restrain and discipline reached their climax in the writings of A. Pope, representing English neo-classicism.

Rationalism itself started doubling its own values by elevating the role of experience, sensory perception. Locke made way to the relativism of reason and the possibility that our ideas do not automatically verify the existence of material objects. This was further explored by George Berkeley: A treatise concerning the principles of human knowledge (1710).


Austen vs Radcliffe (Daniel Serravalle de Sá)

Austen vs Radcliffe

·         Austin’s appreciation of contemporary literature, and her abilities to take its conventions and reinscribe then in her idiosyncratic form.

·         Morland as the Female Quixote, perceptions of the world shaped by the literature she reads. Sensibility learned from reading certain kinds of books. Sentimentalism as a pose rather than nature.

·         Whereas the Radcliffean heroine requires fortitude to overcome her sentimental excesses, Austen replaces her fictional poses, such as sensibility, which a social propriety which itself becomes the correct definition of feminity.

·         Ruin: Represents the antithesis of Augustan ideal: the triumph of chaos over, imagination over rationalism, nature over.

·         Typical threats of the Gothic villain: rape, murder, kidnap, marry for lust and fiscal gain.

·         Montoni’s evil is exaggerated by Emily’s vivid imagination D’Alambert is closer to the conception depicted by The Monk and Melmoth.

Austen exposed her structure. Radcliffe didn’t take it to the next level

JONES, Darryl. Horror: A thematic History in Fiction and Film. London, Arnold, 2002.


JONES, Darryl. Horror: A thematic History in Fiction and Film. London, Arnold, 2002.

CHAPTER 1 - HATING OTHERS: Religion, Nationhood and identity

  The Monk, Romantic Gothic, and Britishness.

“Modern Britain was conceived in horror. The development of the Gothic novel, and thus of modern horror fiction, in English, in the second half of the 18TH century, coincides with (is both a component and by product of) the period of the formation of British national identity. Modern nation’s can be understood, to use Benedict Anderson’s famous phrases, as “imagined communities”, potentially disparate political cultural and ethnic groupings willed into unity by acts of imagination, articulated through narrative, Myth and Symbol (Anderson, Benedict. 1991: Imagined Communities: Reflections on the origin and spread of Nationalism, 2nd ed. London e New York: Verso). National identities are often formed appositionally, that is in a Self-other relationship to a (usually neighbouring) rival nation, which embodied all that is venal, reprehensible, archaic, otherwise rejected. For Britain, this vilified other was France.” (at several wars  from 1689-1815 - Waterloo). See Sage: relation between Gothic and Protestantism.

Certainly the Gothic novel is collusive in this enterprise, shoring up the British, Protestant identity of its readers chauvinistically, through its presentation of a catalogue of caricatured untrustworthy foreignness these were usually Catholic Europeans, either actually French, like the Marquis de Montalt in A. Radcliffe’s The romance of the Forest (1791) (This trope is still going strong even as late as 1864 in the person of the grotesque French governess, Mmd. de La Rougierre, in Sheridan le Fanu’s Uncle Silas) or else Italians like Manfred in Horace Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto (1765) and Schedoni in A. R. The Italian (1797) or Spaniards like Ambrosio in M.L The Monk (1796), who had the status, as it were, of metaphoric Frenchman [Britain could afford being antagonistic towards the Europeans neighbors, not Portugal because it felt its detachment as an island and could indulge in militaristic behavior without risking the mass slaughter of its citizens]

The Marquis de Sade’s famous description of the Gothic novel (writing in 1800 he was thinking particularly of Lewis’s The Monk) as “the necessary fruit of the revolutionary tremors felt by the whole of Europe” (Sade: Idée sur les romans) seems to me doubly significant in this context, as not only is Sade referring to what has become a traditional conception of the Gothic novel as an ideologically and aesthetically radical or revolutionary form in which societal taboos are examined and violated (that is certainly what Sade himself was about, and – if his aim was not simply to make money through sensation and exploitation – may have been what Lewis was doing too), but also to the ways in which the systems, not government, which were to shape the late 18TH century political history insinuate themselves into Gothic novels.

Furthermore, there is a sense in which the non-mimetic, non-realistic modes of the fantastic, the Gothic, and the grotesque, working through symbolic acts of inversion and indirection, were the only aesthetic media with which to represent or respond to current events. Thus, by imaging forth the European Other as Catholic, superstitions, barbarous, irrational, chaotic, rooted in the past, the Gothic novel allowed a British audience conversely to identify itself as protestant, rational, ordered, stable, and modern: Continental Europe is the domain of fantastic reality,  whereas England is rooted in contemporary realism. Symbolically, the further one gets from a stable centre-point, the further back in time (and into the barbarous past) one moves. [Dracula’s famous passage of the trains (p. 10-11), breakdown of modern technology, the uncivilized nature of these countries] [Also Northanger Abbey (Henry saying to Catherine: remember the country and age in which we live. Remember that we are English, that we are Christians.]

What Henry is insisting on here is that England is a stable, Modern, lawful ‘imagined community’. Although this is not presented unproblematically there is allusions the paranoia of the 1790’s (but for the Midland countries of England).

Ambrosio’s celibacy draws him to the portrait of Madonna. The sinister manipulative Monk is of course the staple figure of Protestant anti-monastic literature of the period. Also Radcliffe’ response, Schedoni is presented as pure malevolent charisma. Incapable of seeing the truth in his face, the revealed truth of Protestantism, he becomes a victim of his own poison, the inquisition (John Thorpe reads The Monk as pornography).

Unlike Radcliffe’s novel which ended up in an “explained supernatural” fashion, providing a secular, rational explanation for what had seemed to be supernatural events, it seems that in Lewis they are perfectly right to be superstitions.

Also in Radcliffe’s novels, it is important to realize the extent to which the narrative is mediated through the perceptions of ingenuous and highly sensitive heroine: as Sage notes, ‘She is often wrong in her judgments: intransigently orthodox in her beliefs, she suspects ‘superstition’ all around her (Le Fanu, 2000: xxi). This is certainly true, but it should also be noted that, as in Radcliffe, and as Northanger Abbey also suggests, there is a strong sense in which the rhetoric of Gothicism and the supernatural is the only means by which these young heroines, linguistically circumscribed by decorum, can represent material threats, to their chastity, their life or both.


One notable way of classing people as uncivilized is to quote them as cannibals. (relation to catholic Corpus Christi). Montaigne (1580) discussed this relation between civilized x barbaric in a culturally relativistic approach. In Gulliver’s travels, the Yahoo’s Catholic Irish as Indians.

JONES, Darryl. Horror: A thematic History in Fiction and Film. London, Arnold, 2002.

JONES, Darryl. Horror: A thematic History in Fiction and Film. London, Arnold, 2002.

Introduction: Ban this sick filth!

The controversy about too nasty narratives: “going back, as we shall see, at least as far as the publication of Mathew Lewis`s The Monk in 1976. Reviewing that novel the year after the publication, Samuel Taylor Coleridge believes it to be ‘a romance, which if a parent saw in the hands of a son or daughter, he might reasonably turn pale’ (1797: Review of the Monk, The Critical Review, XIX, February, p. 194-200). Somewhere around this time Jame Austen was beginning to write Northanger Abbey, a novel submitted (but not accepted) for publication in 1803, revised for publication shortly before her death in 1817. And finally published posthumously, with persuasion in 1818. In her “Advertisement by the Authoress” to the revised edition, Austen wrote ‘The public are entreated to bear in mind that 13 years have passed since it was finished, many more since it was begun, and during that period, places, manners, books, and opinions have undergone considerable changes’ (1972, ed. Anne Ehrenpreis. Harmonds worth: Penguin). That is to say, by the time it was published in 1818, Northanger Abbey, set around 1798, was already an historical novel, beneath whose surface was detectable the upheavals of that very turbulent decade, the 1790’s, when England was at war with France, living under the fear of French Invasion, with blown political uprising in Ireland (Gothic novel is a product of this instability). Catherine and Isabella: Are you sure they are all horrid? (Austen 1972: 61). Austen provides a list of genuine Gothic novels published in the 1790’s [ See Sadleir]
Michael Sadleir 1927: The Northanger Novels, English Association Pamphlets, nº 68.

Franz Potter. Twilight of a Genre: Art and Trade in Gothic Fiction, 1814 – 1834. Phd. University of East Anglia, 2002.

POTTER, Franz. Twilight of a Genre: Art and Trade in Gothic
Fiction, 1814 – 1834. Phd. University of East Anglia, 2002.

This thesis sets out to challenge certain assumptions of the canon making process of the Gottic genre. The modern critical view point of the Gothic limits it to a set of high reading achievements: Castle of Otranto, The Italian, Melmoth, are constantly cited as defining the genre. However, this canon excludes the question of whether those novels produced as part of a lucrative “trade” can be admitted, either as a legitimate, literally category of even as a contribution to the genre. These is a clear conflict between art and trade Gothic the first being an indicator of the genre’s critical reception, the other dismissed as not really belonging to the ‘genre’ by an act of assessment which assimilates the popular to the literally and finds it “disreputable”.

CHAPTER 1 Empirical statistical analysis of the “trade” (circulating libraries) Varma argues that after Melmoth (1820) the Gothic splintered into several diverse channels including serials, tales, fragments and bluebooks. (p. 176, 186) a more recent account in Sage’s Gothic Novel (p.84).
“Cheaply printed, bluebooks were often, but not invariable, 36 or 72 page redactions or abridgments of full-length Gothic novels illustrated with crude woodcuts” (p.17, Potter) [ W. Fish circulating library  at Norwich 1817]

CHAPTER 2 Two biographical case studies which illustrate the mechanism of trade (Sarah Wilkinson + Francis Lathom) both exemplified the ability to diversify their craft creating a range of works that reflect the readers shifting interest in the genre.
è Robert Mayo raised the debate of art X trade isolates gothic in magazines (1942) The Gothic short story in magazines: the moralizing rhetoric.

è Appendices complete catalogues of two Norwich circulating libraries (Booths and Fish’s) a large sample (almost 1.000 texts) of Gothic novels, bluebooks, gothic magazines between 1800 – 1834.