Gothic Literature | Style
Setting
In Gothic literature, the setting may be the single most important device. Gothic writers generally set their novels in wild landscapes; in large, often ruined, castles; and/or in subterranean labyrinths. In Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto, the castle itself plays a major role in the novel. As Robert Kiely writes in The Romantic Novel in England, “If anything gives this novel unity and animation, it is the castle. The place itself seems sufficiently charged with emotion to require little assistance from the characters. In fact, external conditions...
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- Gothic Literature: Introduction
- Gothic Literature: Representative Authors
- Gothic Literature: Representative Works
- Gothic Literature: Themes
- Gothic Literature: Style
- Gothic Literature: Movement Variations
- Gothic Literature: Historical Context
- Gothic Literature: Critical Overview
- Gothic Literature: Essays and Criticism
- Gothic Literature: Compare and Contrast
- Gothic Literature: Topics for Further Study
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