The Oxford Book of Gothic Tales

Front Cover
Chris Baldick
Oxford University Press, 2001 - Fiction - 533 pages
The Gothic tale has been with us for over two hundred years, but this collection is the first to illustrate the continuing strength of this special fictional tradition from the late eighteenth century to the present day. Gothic fiction is generally identified from Horace Walpole's Castle ofOtranto and the works of Ann Radcliffe, and with heroes and heroines menaced by feudal villains amid crumbling ruins. While the repertoire of claustrophobic settings, gloomy themes, and threatening atmosphere established the Gothic genre, later writers from Poe onwards achieved an ever greatersophistication, and a shift in emphasis from cruelty to decadence. Modern Gothic is distinguished by its imaginative variety of voice, from the chilling depiction of a disordered mind to the sinister suggestion of vampirism.This anthology brings together the work of writers such as Le Fanu, Hawthorne, Hardy, Faulkner, and Borges with their earliest literary forebears, and emphasizes the central role of women writers from Anna Laetitia Aikin to Isabel Allende and Angela Carter. While the Gothic tale shares somecharacteristics with the ghost story and tales of horror and fantasy, the present volume triumphantly celebrates the distinctive features that define this powerful and unsettling literary form.

Other editions - View all

About the author (2001)

Chris Baldick is Professor of English at Goldsmiths' College. His previous publications include 'In Frankenstein's Shadow: Myth, Monstrosity, and Nineteenth Century Writing' (1987), 'The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Literary Terms' (1991), and an introduction to the Oxford World's Classicsedition of C. R. Maturin's Gothic tale, 'Melmoth the Wanderer'.

Bibliographic information