Wednesday, 9 December 2009

Thursday, 3 December 2009

Gothic Literature - Related Resources



Gothic Literature - Related Resources: "INTRODUCTION



The origins of Gothic literature can be traced to various historical, cultural, and artistic precedents. Figures found in ancient folklore, such as the Demon Lover, the Cannibal Bridegroom, the Devil, and assorted demons, later populated the pages of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Gothic novels and dramas. In addition, many seventeenth- and eighteenth-century works are believed to have served as precursors to the development of the Gothic tradition in Romantic literature. These works include plays by William Shakespeare, such as Hamlet (c. 1600–01), and Macbeth (1606), which feature supernatural elements, demons, and apparitions, and Daniel Defoe's An Essay on the History and Reality of Apparitions (1727), which was written to support religion and discourage superstition by providing evidence of the existence of good spirits, angels, and other divine manifestations, and by ridiculing delusions and naive credulity. However, while these elements were present in literature and folklore prior to the mid-eighteenth century, when the Gothic movement began, it was the political, social, and theological landscape of eighteenth-century Europe that served as an impetus for this movement. Edmund Burke's treatise A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful (1757) introduced the concept of increasing appreciation for the nature of experiences characterized by the 'sublime' and 'beautiful' by depicting and then engaging (vicariously) in experiences comprised of elements that are contrary in nature, such as terror, death, and evil. Writers composed Gothic narratives during this period largely in response to anxiety over the change in social and political structure brought about by such events as the French Revolution, the rise in secular-based government, and the rapidly changing nature of the everyday world brought about by scientific advances and industrial development, in addition to an increasing aesthetic demand for realism rather than folklore and fantasy. The Gothic worlds depicted fears about what might happen, what could go wrong, and what could be lost by continuing along the path of political, social, and theological change, as well as reflecting the desire to return to the time of fantasy and belief in supernatural intervention that characterized the Middle Ages. In some cases Gothic narratives were also used to depict horrors that existed in the old social and political order—the evils of an unequal, intolerant society. In Gothic narratives writers were able to both express the anxiety generated by this upheaval and, as Burke suggested, increase society's appreciation and desire for change and progress.




It is Horace Walpole's novel The Castle of Otranto (1764) that is generally acclaimed as the original work of Gothic literature—despite the fact that some of the Gothic trappings found in Walpole's work were present in works such as Tobias Smollett's The Adventures of Ferdinand Count Fathom (1753)—because in his narrative Walpole brings together elements of the supernatural and horrific, and models his ruined castle setting after his real-life residence, Strawberry Hill, a modern version of a medieval castle. The characters in the novel try to succeed in the modern world and to adhere to the optimism and forward-looking agenda they have been asked to advance, but a dark, ancient evil from the distant past dooms them to failure. While the literary merits of Walpole's novel were challenged by many critics, the work inspired the reading public and authors alike, and works imitative of Otranto, written in what became known as the Gothic style, became extremely popular. Brother and sister John Aikin and Anna Laetitia (Aikin) Barbauld, in their Miscellaneous Pieces in Prose (1773), represent the intellectual and psychological mechanics of Gothic literature, and offer 'Sir Bertrand, A Fragment,' a story written in Gothic style, to illustrate their assertions. Ann Radcliffe, like Walpole, is considered one of the founders of the Gothic genre. Radcliffe began her career as a Gothic writer with the publication of her well-received novel The Castles of Athlin and Dunbayne in 1789, and quickly followed up with the novels A Sicilian Romance and The Romance of the Forest published in 1790 and 1791, respectively. Radcliffe's 1794 novel, The Mysteries of Udolpho is regarded by many as the quintessential example of eighteenth-century fiction at its finest, and it is for this work that she is best known. Mrs. Eliza Parsons's Castle of Wolfenbach (1793) is an example of the melodramatic popular 'shilling shocker,' or 'penny dreadful' type of Gothic fiction, a debased imitation of Radcliffe's style, characterized by gross excess and lack of literary skill, that was parodied by Jane Austen in Northanger Abbey (1818). Parsons was one of many novelists, including Edward Bulwer-Lytton—held as an author of a more 'elevated,' or skilled example of the popular Gothic melodrama—who produced works of this kind. Other works considered classic examples of the Gothic novel are Matthew Gregory Lewis's The Monk (1796), and Charles Robert Maturin's Melmoth the Wanderer (1820), both of which epitomize the stock Gothic character of the outsider, or social outcast, who must face the consequences of committing mortal sin.

The great Romantic poets Percy Bysshe Shelley, Lord Byron, John Keats, and Samuel Taylor Coleridge also contributed to the Gothic tradition in literature, and, according to critic Fred Botting, produced 'major innovations, or renovations of the genre' that 'drew it closer to aspects of Romanticism.' The Romantic writers, asserts Botting as well as other commentators, while utilizing the settings and devices developed by Walpole, Radcliffe, and others, focused and expanded upon the psychological, internal qualities of the protagonists, and dealt with such themes as the search for identity, desire versus duty, social alienation, and the search for truth. William Godwin, and his daughter, Mary Shelley, are the Romantic writers most closely associated with the Gothic tradition. Godwin's Things as They Are; or, The Adventures of Caleb Williams (1794) utilizes the Gothic tradition to indict political repression and protest the tyrannical rule of the day, while Shelley's Gothic in Frankenstein (1818) urges personal integrity and social responsibility in an age of scientific progress, and represents the anxiety produced by the disruption of the traditional, known natural world order.

While English writers are credited with founding the Gothic novel, Scottish writers such as James Hogg contributed heavily to the genre, and many English-language works were influenced by German literary traditions, particularly the works of such writers as Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and E. T. A. Hoffmann. Sir Walter Scott's works reflect a German sensibility, and works such as his Waverly (1814)—as well as the works of others, including Walpole, Radcliffe, Shelley, Maturin, and Lewis—in turn inspired Charles Brockden Brown, Edgar Allan Poe, and James Fenimore Cooper, some of the most notable authors who developed what became the American Gothic tradition in literature. In addition, the English Gothic tradition influenced French authors, including Gaston Leroux, and Russian authors, including Fyodor Dostoevsky and Anton Chekhov. Since its inception, the Gothic genre in literature has undergone numerous changes and adaptations, but its essential role as a means of depicting humanity's deepest, darkest fears and otherwise unspeakable evils—both real and imagined—has endured."

Thursday, 19 November 2009

ONE HUNDRED YEARS FROM NOW



ONE HUNDRED YEARS FROM NOW: "One hundred years from now Ben, David, Charlie and Warren will finally share,

a chapter in financial textbooks that care, about stocks as part ownership of a business.

One hundred years from now, Mr. Market will still call plays, up and down,

and many enthused speculators will still smile, yell, cry, or frown.



The three most important words in investing will remain true.

The 'Margin of Safety' you see, is the key, that makes this magic free.

Then with this safety, we can grow wealthy.



Above all else, America will stand strong if we fix what is wrong,

and if information is exchanged ethically and freely.

Strong, if the rewards earned are those based upon merits.

We know these are two important lifelong tenets.



It helps to have wide experiences with analyzing and managing,

numerous different businesses; even in difficult downturns and busty surges.



Rational and thorough business analysis takes keen emotional intellects,

and the disciplined tracking of understandable businesses.

For in business there are often tempting smooches, and impressive pooches.

The wonderful ones, will continue to be the most fun.

Those with Trustworthy First-Class Managements and proven track records,

will yield the most generous and rewarding runs."

Monday, 16 November 2009

Gothic Portal - Love Gothic Poems dark goth poetry subculture.




Gothic Portal - Love Gothic Poems dark goth poetry subculture.: "'Within the darkness of night, Bring forth the black rose, For thy morbid mistress awaits, Hear the mortals screams as she wakes, Her beauty shines from the darkness within her eyes, Skin white as snow and eyes dark as sulphur, Oh what I would give for her, Just to hear her call my name,' What I would give, For her to be mine, I'd dig my grave, For I want her beauty to be mine, Oh what hath spawned that evil vixen from hells gate, But only from lucifers mouth, Can her freedom be set, She walks the path of darkness, That will always be met, She mourns the day, And with the darkness comes her appetite to feed on human flesh, Morbidity within her soul, and hatred for those who do not know, Of the life that they could have, Though darkness has claimed her soul, She walks as though she doesn't know, The end for her is near, And it is truly clear, 'Remember the days, with the sun and it's rays, when it shined upon us, no judgement was passed, and we walked free in the world,' Is it true what they say, There is no beauty without cruelty, Though to take her life from her, Would be far worse than she could ever do, 'now we feel the pain of it all, for our memories kill her, and I cannot lose her, for she is so cruel.' Her sins cannot be unmas"


Gothic Portal - Night Gothic Poems goth dark gothic subculture.

Gothic Portal - Night Gothic Poems goth dark gothic subculture.: "This Night as Eternity night falls upon the forest the stars shine bright revealing the haunted masks of the dead souls taking flight look beyond the windowsill watch as they fly aurora surrounding them makes you want to cry close your eyes and go to sleep i'll protect you so don't weep oh, beyond your smile oh, sleep tonight oh, the haunted mile oh, the love filled tile into the night sky they leave bringing light unto the fern they died because of love and for love they will return the world is brighter now that you have appeared now that i'm with you my love has seared into the dark i will never ride and into my heart you will never hide don't worry my dear nothing will take you away you have nothing to fear for with me you will stay sleep forever if you wish i'll stay with you my heart is your hearts dish to feed and true oh, beyond your smile oh, sleep tonight oh, the haunted mile oh, the love filled tile don't worry my love is true i will always wait for you nothing makes me want to leave and i hope nothing makes you too beyond this world there is so much more to make you look more beautiful though it is hard to imagine but your beauty cannot be fulfilled entwining are the trees reaching together for unity they wish they could have what we do you have made me fall in love with you"

Gothic Portal - Gothic Poems Subculture goth dark gothic subculture.

Gothic Portal - Gothic Poems Subculture goth dark gothic subculture.: "And then there was 'The Goth' The Gothic subculture are freethinkers The Gothic's have been well known to linger. In The Gothic scene they tend to wear black. The Cyber Goths occasionally hack. Goths enjoy dark music, poetry and art. Goths cliques form from society being pulled apart. Some Goths have been featured in 'Dork Tower'. It's a witty look at love, trust, and power. The majority of Goths are very open. A lot tend to spend their time moping. Gothic formed from early 80's Punk Rock, being looked down upon from the Jocks. Goth is a rejection from the public. Many are just outcasts into the mystic. Certain Goths like to dress in Victorian clothes. Some people might have the notion their schizos. Industrial clothes are big in the scene. Because they don't like you doesn't mean their mean. Some Goths like to have piercing's for pleasure. Some Goths are very nice and much sweeter. Joy Division was the start of Goth Music. To a lot of people the they seem drastic. 'Hot Topic' stores are for the Trendy Goth. Some make clothes with different kinds of cloth. In the night scene there are many clubs. In doing their dark art some draw cherubs. Like Angel in Buffy they like to brood. Angst to them is something a kin to food. Cyber Goths also enjoy the club scene. There is no dress code you can even wear gree"