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CFP: ‘Ill met by moonlight’: Gothic encounters with enchantment and the Faerie realm in literature and culture University of Hertfordshire, 8‒10 April 2021
- Author(s):
- Bill Hughes (see profile)
- Date:
- 2020
- Group(s):
- Film Studies, Gothicists, Speculative and Science Fiction, Victorian Studies
- Subject(s):
- Fairy tales, Arts, Gothic, Fantasy literature, Romanticism, English literature, Nineteenth century, Paranormal romance stories
- Item Type:
- Other
- Tag(s):
- Fairies, Gothic, Romantic literature, Victorian literature, Paranormal romance
- Permanent URL:
- http://dx.doi.org/10.17613/fky1-xx82
- Abstract:
- As Prof. Dale Townsend has observed, the concept of the Gothic has had an association with fairies from its inception; even before Walpole’s 1764 Castle of Otranto (considered the first Gothic novel), eighteenth-century poetics talked of ‘the fairy kind of writing’ which, for Addison, ‘raise a pleasing kind of Horrour in the Mind of the Reader’ and ‘and favour those secret Terrours and Apprehensions to which the Mind of Man is naturally subject’. Johnson, in his Preface to Shakespeare (1765), talks of ‘the loves of Theseus and Hippolyta combined with the Gothic mythology of fairies’. ‘Horror’ and ‘terror’ are key terms of affect in Gothic criticism; Townsend urges us, however, to move away from this dichotomy. While we are certainly interested in the darker aspects of fairies and the fear they may induce, this conference also welcomes attention to that aspect of Gothic that invokes wonder and enchantment.
- Metadata:
- xml
- Status:
- Published
- Last Updated:
- 3 years ago
- License:
- All Rights Reserved
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CFP: ‘Ill met by moonlight’: Gothic encounters with enchantment and the Faerie realm in literature and culture University of Hertfordshire, 8‒10 April 2021