Engh 370: Victorian Gothic Dashboard
Description
Investigates how the Victorians used the Gothic – a genre which explores the macabre, the supernatural, the uncanny – to examine, represent, and re-imagine the complexities of their own age, to play out in the realm of fantasy the challenges of urban life, of science, of empire, of shifting definitions of sexuality, gender, and art. This course will examine these questions by looking first at the 18th-century and Romantic roots of the Gothic and then at a range of Victorian texts. Finally, we’ll consider how Gothic modes and forms have lived on and been appropriated in 20th and 21st-century popular culture. Throughout the course, contemporary critical approaches to the Gothic will provide us with a variety of tools for reading. As a seminar and a research course, this class will emphasize reading criticism and theory and developing each student’s skills as a critical writer in response to primary as well as critical, theoretical, and popular texts.
Galleries, Timelines, and Maps
This gallery collects examples of the ‘afterlives’ of the Victorian Gothic – the ways in which it has persisted into the 20th/21st centuries in literature and in all kinds of popular culture forms – movies, TV, podcasts and other online narratives, manga, anime, comic books , photographs and images – almost any form you can think of. Students in the class are collecting these and contributing them to the gallery from which we draw examples we’ll look at at the end of each class.
Individual Entries
There is no content in this group.