The Gothic Imagination: Expansion in Gothic Literature and ArtDemonstrates the connection between Gothic literature and art by analyzing the plot patterns, characters, and settings in Gothic stories and the construction and motifs of Gothic art from a stylistic, historical, and psychological approach. |
Contents
Acknowledgments | 9 |
The Relationship of Gothic Art to Gothic Literature | 47 |
Particular Works of Gothic Literature | 73 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Ann Radcliffe appear Austin Ruthyn beauty become Bryerly castle characters Charles Robert Maturin Christianity confrontation consciousness contrast convoluted corpse create dark dead depicted described Donna Clara door dreams Elinor emotional eternal evil expansion experience extremes eyes fear footnote Frankenstein garden ghost Gothic architecture Gothic art Gothic cathedral Gothic line Gothic literature Gothic novel Gothic sensibility Gothic writers grotesque hands haunted house Haunters height Helena human images intensification intensity Isidora and Melmoth John Melmoth John Sandal LeFanu Madame Rougierre manuscript Mary Shelley Maturin Maud Melmoth the Wanderer mind Moncada monster movement narrator nature necrophilia necrophilic night Northern ornament pain paradise perversion Philip Hallie psychological reader reality religion religious repetition repressed restless sense Seventh Moon sexual shadow Shelley sion soul speaks spiritual story stranger supernatural tale tall terror theme thought tion twisted Uncle Silas vampire vaults victim villains violence vision Walberg wild Wilhelm Worringer words Worringer York