The Mysterious Mother. A Tragedy
Author: Horace Walpole
Publisher:
Published: 1791
Total Pages: 110
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKRead and Download eBook Full
Author: Horace Walpole
Publisher:
Published: 1791
Total Pages: 110
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Horace Walpole
Publisher:
Published: 1791
Total Pages: 104
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Horace Walpole
Publisher:
Published: 1781
Total Pages: 114
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Paul Baines
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Published: 2000
Total Pages: 436
ISBN-13: 9780192833167
DOWNLOAD EBOOKDuring the period of European revolutions the British Romantic theatre found itself reexaming the whole cast of social and sexual relations. The five plays grouped here represent some of the most radical and unusual examples of Romantic drama: Horace Walpole invented gothic melodrama with hisincest tragedy, The Mysterious Mother (1768), and Robert Southey imagined the theatre as a site of revolutionary protest in Wat Tyler (1794). Joanna Baillie's psychological case study in aristocratic hatred, De Monfort (1768) was thought too alarming to have been written by a woman, while ElizabethInchbald's hugely successful Lovers' Vows (1798) was sufficiently subversive for Jane Austen to analyse some of its illicit potential in Mansfield Park (1814). Byron's strenuous tragedy The Two Foscari (1821) explores an inescapable conflict between parental love and political authority. The stageimagined by these writers is an arena of tense and embattled desires, with sexual and political claims mapped onto the same conflicts of power. This exciting edition is the only one of its kind and provides the first authorized texts of the plays complete with fully-researched reference to majorauthorial revision.
Author: Horace Walpole
Publisher:
Published: 2020-04-04
Total Pages: 134
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe Castle of Otranto is a book by Horace Walpole first published in 1764 and generally regarded as the first gothic novel. In the second edition, Walpole applied the word 'Gothic' to the novel in the subtitle - "A Gothic Story". The novel merged medievalism and terror in a style that has endured ever since. The aesthetics of the book shaped modern-day gothic books, films, art, music and the goth subculture
Author:
Publisher: Art of Darkness: Ingenious
Published:
Total Pages: 281
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Jenny DiPlacidi
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Published: 2018-02-24
Total Pages: 370
ISBN-13: 1526107562
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis electronic version has been made available under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-ND) open access license. The first full-length study of incest in the Gothic genre, this book argues that Gothic writers resisted the power structures of their society through incestuous desires. It provides interdisciplinary readings of incest within father-daughter, sibling, mother-son, cousin and uncle-niece relationships in texts by authors including Emily Brontë, Eliza Parsons, Ann Radcliffe and Eleanor Sleath. The analyses, underpinned by historical, literary and cultural contexts, reveal that the incest thematic allowed writers to explore a range of related sexual, social and legal concerns. Through representations of incest, Gothic writers modelled alternative agencies, sexualities and family structures that remain relevant today.
Author: George E. Haggerty
Publisher: Bucknell University Press
Published: 2011-05-12
Total Pages: 189
ISBN-13: 1611480116
DOWNLOAD EBOOKIn looking closely at Horace Walpole's Correspondence, George E. Haggerty shows how these letters, when taken in aggregate, offer an astonishingly vivid account of the vagaries of eighteenth-century masculinity. Walpole talks about himself obsessively: his wants, his needs, his desires; hies physical and mental pain; his artistic appreciation and his critical responses. It is impossible to read these letters and not come away with a vivid impression of a complex personality from another age. Haggerty examines the ways in which Walpole presents himself as an eighteenth-century gentleman, and considers his personal relationships, his needs and aspirations, his emotionalism and his rationality - in short, his construction of himself - in order to see what it tells us about the age in general and more specifically, about masculinity in an era of social flux. This study of Walpole and his epistolary relations offers a unique window into both the history of masculinity in the eighteenth century and the codification of friendship as the preeminent value in western culture. Recent studies have tried to rewrite Walpole in a twenty-first century mold while this work looks at the writer and the ways in which he constructs himself and his relations, not in hopes of uncovering a lurid secret, but rather in pursuit of the figure that he created and that has fascinated generations of readers and writers since the eighteenth century.
Author: Richard Cumberland
Publisher:
Published: 1783
Total Pages: 96
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Cathi Unsworth
Publisher: MIT Press
Published: 2021-02-23
Total Pages: 365
ISBN-13: 1913689158
DOWNLOAD EBOOKA gripping crime novel inspired by the "Jack the Stripper" killings in 1960s London. Bad Penny Blues is the latest gripping crime fiction from Cathi Unsworth, London's undisputed queen of noir. Set in late 1950s and early 1960s London, it is loosely based on the West London "Jack the Stripper" killings that rocked the city. The narrative follows police officer Pete Bradley, who investigates the serial killings of a series of prostitutes, and, in a parallel story, Stella, part of the art and fashion worlds of 1960s "Swinging London," who is haunted by visions of the murdered women.