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  1. May 28, 2006 · Summary. From the turn of the eighteenth into the nineteenth century and the beginnings of a distinctive American literature, the Gothic has stubbornly flourished in the United States. Its cultural role, though, has been entirely paradoxical: an optimistic country founded upon the Enlightenment principles of liberty and “the pursuit of ...

    • Eric Savoy
    • 2002
  2. American gothic fiction is a subgenre of gothic fiction. Elements specific to American Gothic include: rationality versus the irrational, puritanism, guilt, the uncanny (das unheimliche), ab-humans, ghosts, and monsters.

  3. Gothic literature continues to provide an alternative reading of American culture in the volatile decades from the 1960s to the present. As new voices from minority groups have emerged, they have often expressed themselves though the Gothic, while changing and enriching the Gothic tradition.

    • Charles L. Crow
    • 1
  4. desires and irrational impulses. Within the American Gothic tradition, this strain is arguably introduced by late eighteenth-century Gothicist Charles Brockden Brown, notably in his 1799 novel Edgar Huntly, Or, Memoirs of a Sleepwalker, in which the eponymous protagonist turns out to be a stranger to himself – compelled by forces of which he is ...

  5. In exploring extremes, whether of cruelty, rapacity and fear, or passion and sexual degradation, the Gothic tends to reinforce, if only in a novel's final pages, culturally prescribed doctrines of morality and propriety.

    • 1MB
    • 5
  6. The term American Gothic is an American genre that stems from the Gothic literature genre from Europe in the late eighteenth century. Why is American Gothic so important? American Gothic literature is important because it speaks to the darker side of humanity.

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  8. Definition. American Gothic is a literary and artistic movement that emerged in the United States during the late 18th and early 19th centuries, characterized by its use of dark themes, supernatural elements, and an exploration of the human psyche.

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