Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

AQA LITB3 Elements of the Gothic: Essay Plans. ‘There is more horror than terror in Carter’s treatment of the Gothic’ Consider this view in the light.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "AQA LITB3 Elements of the Gothic: Essay Plans. ‘There is more horror than terror in Carter’s treatment of the Gothic’ Consider this view in the light."— Presentation transcript:

1 AQA LITB3 Elements of the Gothic: Essay Plans

2 ‘There is more horror than terror in Carter’s treatment of the Gothic’ Consider this view in the light of at least two stories from ‘The Bloody Chamber’

3  Terror  the feeling of dread that precedes the horrifying experience  suspense creates terror  characterised by obscurity and indeterminacy  a source of the sublime  Horror  the feeling of revulsion after a frightening event  more related to being shocked or scared

4 The Bloody Chamber – Terror  foreshadowing of heroine’s death  ‘the necklace that prefigures your end’  heroine‘s fear of her husband’s return  all build up suspense and increase terror  suspense when heroine is about to unlock the bloody chamber – no light down the corridor, Marquis calls it his ‘enfer’ = French for Hell  metaphors of Marquis as a beast and as God invoke terror in the reader as he is very powerful, dominant Gothic male  ‘All the better to see you’ – perverse imitation of childhood fears  terror

5 The Bloody Chamber – Horror  ‘instruments of mutilation’ are displayed grandly  funeral lilies create a parallel with bridal chamber  makes more of an impact on the reader?  ‘walls gleamed...as if they were sweating with fright’  horror found in the bloody chamber – same for all stories?  much less horror than terror, but still very gruesome, Gothic, scary

6 The Lady of The House of Love – Terror  Almost no horror  Countess’s thoughts in capitals – ‘Now you are at the place of annihilation’, ‘Fee fie fo fum, I smell the blood of an Englishman’ – increases terror and suspense  Tales of Countess’s hunger that ‘always overcomes her’ increase sympathy for the soldier  Story seen through the eyes of the Countess – French words dropped into narrative: ‘chinoiserie escritoire’

7 Conclusion  Carter uses horror to shock and scare her audience  However, it is her use of terror that appeals to the reader’s intellect, creating suspense and fear – typical of Gothic novels  Terror created by foreshadowing and language  Terror is more important and more prominent in Carter’s stories and this makes them fit in so well with the Gothic genre

8 What have you found striking about Carter’s presentation of character? Discuss this, using two stories from ‘The Bloody Chamber’

9 Transformations  Almost all of Carter’s characters are different people at the end of her stories  Form of a short story makes these transformations more significant  Heroine is nearly always stronger, male is nearly always weaker  Human  beasts/beasts  humans both highlight the animalistic nature of humans: ‘she showed us what we could have been’ (WA)  Show supernatural elements of story - Gothic

10 Fairy Tales  Carter aimed to extract the ‘latent content’ of fairytales  Heroines sexualised e.g. Red Riding Hood, Snow White is raped  Keeps animals as characters e.g. Puss in Boots  Monsters/villains have more than one side e.g. Lady of the House of Love, less ‘black and white’ than fairytales  Much fewer knights in shining armour – men seem to need help/be villains

11 Gender  Fairy tales and Gothic genre: women weak, men strong  Role reversal: Courtship of Mr Lyon (‘as if, curious reversal, she frightened him’)  Carter’s Gothic reinterpretations outweighed by her feminist views – females are strong – not characteristic of Gothic literature or fairytales  Heroines evoke sympathy from the readers – even ‘villains’ e.g. Lady of the House of Love

12 How is Gothic language and imagery used to develop themes and characters in ‘Dr Faustus’?

13 Language  Faustus begins to use prose in the last scene – highlights Faustus’s demise  Lots of punctuation shows his blind terror and panic at the end of the play – typically Gothic, suspense, fear  Classical references – Icarus’s ‘waxen wings’ – tell audience Faustus is going to fail, also Achilles’ fatal flaw – typically Gothic, looking back to the past  Religious – deliberately blasphemous e.g. ‘necromantic books are Heavenly’  Spells are in Latin – language of the educated, Renaissance, Gothic

14 Imagery  Blood  Faustus’s blood congeals  Old man refers to redemptive power of blood of Christ  Faustus sees Christ’s blood running across the sky on his last night  ‘Stab thine arm courageously’  ‘With my proper blood, I assure my soul to be great Lucifer’s’  Supernatural/religion  Nothing significant is accomplished through magic  God is most powerful – doesn’t save Faustus  Good and Evil angels

15 Themes and Characters  Medieval language highlights theme of ‘conflict between Medieval and Renaissance values’  Imagery of Hell as ‘under the Heavens’ and using trap door – Medieval imagery  Creates conflict as Mephistopheles says ‘this is hell, nor am I out of it’  Faustus uses eloquent, oratorical, resonant language – highlights his downfall  Lots of repeated words ‘damned’, ‘desire’, ‘Hell’ – Gothic words that highlight themes of the play


Download ppt "AQA LITB3 Elements of the Gothic: Essay Plans. ‘There is more horror than terror in Carter’s treatment of the Gothic’ Consider this view in the light."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google