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Thursday, September 2

A New Gothic Revival

Wow, last post was my 200th! That was cool, and I haven't even been writing exclusively in this blog, either. One of my life mottos is that I'm a member of the Chip-Away tribe. I just keep chipping away. $10 every week pays off a credit card. One paragraph a day builds a novel. One jog around the block every day trains for a marathon. One kiss a day creates a relationship; one hug heals a lifetime. It's amazing what tiny things done consistently over a period of time can do.

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But, I digress. What I've been thinking about today has a darker twist - a new Gothic Revival in literature. The original Gothic Revival took place between the years 1770 and 1840. Publications like "Frankenstein," "The Vampyre", "Jane Eyre", "The Castle of Otranto", Poe's ouevre, and other Gothic works stirred the emotions. Jane Austen pokes fun of Gothic novels in "Northanger Abbey", finding them quite ridiculous. However, these Gothic novels are the birthplace of the modern horror genre and also lend themselves to some dark fantasy ... which you see today. I think we're in a second Gothic Revival phase, at least in regards to literature.

J. K. Rowling started it, by making her ever-popular Harry Potter series darker and darker. She used many elements of the Gothic novel - an enchanted/haunted castle (Hogwarts), magic and magicians/wizards, an atmosphere of mystery or suspense as Harry tries to figure out strange things, an ancient curse connected to someone (Harry's lightning scar), and supernatural events. The Dementors and the Death Eaters are based on Gothic creatures and archetypes like the Grim Reaper. However, Rowling eliminated the lover aspect and made her Gothic hero a teenage child. The moody atmosphere and fantastical elements are the perfect setting to display the hormonal mood changes of a teenager, something not really familiar to Gothic readers of the 19th century. Teenagers weren't protagonists; men and women were.

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"Twilight", whether you love it or hate it, is another obvious throwback to Gothic novels. The night that Mary Shelley wrote "Frankenstein," the doctor, John Polidori, that was with her group also wrote the first vampire story - "The Vampyre". Lord Ruthven is a suave nobleman and Ianthe a beautiful woman. Sound familiar? "Twilight" is also a teen version of "Beauty and Beast", a Gothic tale readers of the 19th century would have been familiar with. In fact, while watching "Twilight", I was struck by how the story was so closely aligned with the fairy tale. It helped explain, for me, why it has such universal appeal!

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So, if Harry Potter and Twilight are representative of a new upswing in Gothic literature ... then why has it become so popular lately? I think I need to take a look at larger events outside of literature to discover the answer. Literature is representative of the culture it comes from, and our culture hasn't had such a great time the past decade. So here's my theory:

With the economic recession, a war in Iraq for seven years, and real-life tragedies like Hurricane Katrina, earthquakes, and global warming, people want to read a story that allows them to feel their pain and anguish through fantastical escape. Fantasy and historical fiction are booming genres right now; both allow the reader to escape into a different world but also connect deeply with their own repressed emotions about what’s happening in their lives. When people suffer, they don’t want to read happy, truthful, or gory stories. We just want to turn off reality and escape for awhile ... but not to a place where everything is fine and hunky-dory.

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Now that we are in a new Gothic Revival, if you're a writer you can take advantage of this. If you have any darker or fantastical story ideas, now is the time to pitch them. Especially if they contain the traditional elements of Gothic novels, myths, and fairy tales. I'm basing a new historical fantasy story on the darker aspects of Alice in Wonderland, The Wizard of Oz, and the myth of Persephone's kidnapping.

What Gothic story idea would you come up with?

4 comments:

Jillian September 3, 2010 at 6:56 AM  

Fascinating as always, Meg. I learn a lot from you!

- Jill ;-)

Meg September 3, 2010 at 10:19 AM  

Thank you Jill! So glad to have you stop by! Tell your twin sister Miss Corra M that I said hi! ;)

Kittie Howard September 3, 2010 at 6:28 PM  

Jillian's right, I learn a lot from you. Thanks, Meg.

Jillian September 4, 2010 at 6:20 PM  

Ha ha. Okay. Will do. :D

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Louisa May Alcott

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