Gothic Writing 1750-1820: A Genealogy

Summary
Now available again in paperback, this provocative study by Robert Miles uses the tools of modern literary theory and criticism to analyse this very distinctive body of texts. Miles introduces the reader to contexts of Gothic in the eigteenth century including its historical development and its placement within the period's concerns with discourse and gender.
By using texts ranging from sensational novels such as The Monk and The Mysteries of Udolpho, poetic variations on Gothic by Coleridge, Shelley and Keats, to satirical works on the theme by Jane Austen, Miles presents an intriguing overview of Gothic literature. By drawing extensively on the ideas of Michel Foucault to establish a genealogy he brings Gothic writing in from the margins of 'popular fiction', resituating it at the centre of debate about Romanticism.
Similar Books
-
Writing the Past, Inscribing the Future: History as Prophecy in Colonial Java
by Nancy K. Florida
-
Short Voyages to the Land of the People
by Jacques Rancière
-
Romantic Writing and Pedestrian Travel
by Robin Jarvis
-
Transamerican Literary Relations and the Nineteenth-Century Public Sphere
by Anna Brickhouse
-
The Historic Imaginary: Politics of History in Fascist Italy
by Claudio Fogu
-
-
Poetics Of The Pretext: Reading Lautréamont
by Roland-François Lack
-
-
English Literature and the Russian Aesthetic Renaissance
by Rachel Polonsky
-
The Elsewhere: On Belonging at a Near Distance
by Adam Zachary Newton
-
-
First Encounters in French and German Prose Fiction, 1830-1883
by Sima Kappeler