Challenging the widely held assumption that gothic literature is mainly about fear, Agnieszka Soltysik Monnet argues that the American Gothic, and gothic literature in general, is also about judgment. Analyzing canonical works by Poe, Hawthorne, Melville, Gilman, and James, Monnet persuasively argues that these authors' concerns about slavery, gender, and sexuality tacitly inform works that deal explicitly with less controversial subjects.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
"The progression of Monnet's argument from the introduction through the four chapters offers a clear demonstration of how American Gothic literature destabilizes conventions. The engagement of gothic writers with contemporary political and social issues is also effectively argued, and it is the elucidation of this point particularly that makes Monnet's study essential to current critical discussions about the function and significance of gothic literature and art." - Charlotte Fiehn, University of Cambridge, British Society for Literature and Science
'Monnet's study is deftly written. ... Monnet's study may prompt us to yearn for a still richer story about the associations and paths generated by this form in a longer and more culturally diverse literary history. ...[It] provides a crisp and useful challenge to our understanding of the gothic mode at a moment when literary study itself continues to "re-describe" its own narrative in contradictory, uneasy, and productive ways.' - NBOL-19
'This book displays thorough and impressive knowledge of the texts and of relevant criticism, and cultural background. It is critically sophisticated yet accessible, and a model of elegant clarity. Any scholar of American Gothic should know and will profit from Monnet's fine study.' - Gothic Studies
'Throughout this study, what Monnet does particularly well is to situate these texts within the history of their original reception, as well as the history of the more recent critical responses to them, pointing to blind spots in the critical readings of these texts. The connections she draws across a range of texts (particularly in the final chapter) are insightful, and this study does much to revive interest in the relatively under-studied ways that the gothic engages not merely in fanciful horrors, but the terrors of the real world.' - Review of English Studies
'The Poetics and Politics of the American Gothic is a well-researched study of five nineteenth-century writers who 'share a concern with the political and ideological debates of their time,' often 'indirectly' expressed (27). Monnet maintains an effective balance between her readings of the texts, a critical awareness, and her own rich questions, claims, and theoretical framework...' - Notes and Queries
'Monnet's study is deftly written. ... Monnet's study may prompt us to yearn for a still richer story about the associations and paths generated by this form in a longer and more culturally diverse literary history. ...[It] provides a crisp and useful challenge to our understanding of the gothic mode at a moment when literary study itself continues to "re-describe" its own narrative in contradictory, uneasy, and productive ways.' - NBOL-19
'This book displays thorough and impressive knowledge of the texts and of relevant criticism, and cultural background. It is critically sophisticated yet accessible, and a model of elegant clarity. Any scholar of American Gothic should know and will profit from Monnet's fine study.' - Gothic Studies
'Throughout this study, what Monnet does particularly well is to situate these texts within the history of their original reception, as well as the history of the more recent critical responses to them, pointing to blind spots in the critical readings of these texts. The connections she draws across a range of texts (particularly in the final chapter) are insightful, and this study does much to revive interest in the relatively under-studied ways that the gothic engages not merely in fanciful horrors, but the terrors of the real world.' - Review of English Studies
'The Poetics and Politics of the American Gothic is a well-researched study of five nineteenth-century writers who 'share a concern with the political and ideological debates of their time,' often 'indirectly' expressed (27). Monnet maintains an effective balance between her readings of the texts, a critical awareness, and her own rich questions, claims, and theoretical framework...' - Notes and Queries