Gothic Characters and Settings
This page delves into the distinctive characters and settings that define Gothic literature, highlighting their exaggerated nature and symbolic significance.
Gothic Characters
Gothic characters are often exaggerated archetypes that reflect the hopes and fears of their time period.
Example: Common character types in Gothic literature include damsels in distress, heroes, and villains.
Supernatural characters play a crucial role in Gothic narratives, with vampires, ghosts, zombies, and other mythical creatures often driving the plot.
Gothic Settings
Settings in Gothic literature are carefully chosen to create an atmosphere of mystery and unease.
Highlight: Gothic settings often feature ancient, decaying structures such as castles and monasteries, which may have religious connotations.
Mazes and labyrinthine spaces are frequently used to evoke feelings of being lost, isolated, or trapped. Darkness and pathetic fallacy (where the environment reflects the characters' emotions) are consistently employed to enhance the atmospheric tension.
Definition: Pathetic fallacy is a literary device where the natural world reflects or echoes the emotions of the characters or the tone of the story.
Clashing Time Periods
Gothic narratives often take place at moments of transition between different eras, such as the medieval and Renaissance periods. This technique creates a sense of disorientation and highlights the conflict between modernity and antiquity.
Quote: "There is a strong opposition in the gothic between the modern and the ancient as everything characters think they've left safely behind come back to haunt them."
Power and Constraint
Gothic literature frequently explores themes of power dynamics and constraint, both physical and psychological. The genre is "obsessed with constraint, entrapment, and forced actions."
Example: The vulnerable woman set against the male villain is a common trope in Gothic literature, highlighting sexual difference and power imbalances.
Gothic fiction also has the freedom to explore erotic themes, including same-sex desire, perversion, obsession, voyeurism, and sexual violence, often pushing boundaries close to pornography.
Horror vs. Terror
Ann Radcliffe's distinction between horror and terror is crucial in understanding the psychological impact of Gothic literature:
- Horror: Physical reaction, freezes the person, debilitating but can be escaped, often gory and disgusting.
- Terror: Psychological, provokes a response, productive, cannot be escaped, can be explained rationally, involves mental torment.
Highlight: The element of doubt, particularly about supernatural occurrences and the limits of human knowledge, is a central feature of Gothic literature.