The Rise of the Gothic Novel
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The Rise of the Gothic Novel

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eBook - ePub

The Rise of the Gothic Novel

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About This Book

One of the central images conjured up by the gothic novel is that of a shadowy spectre slowly rising from a mysterious abyss. In The Rise of the Gothic Novel, Maggie Kilgour argues that the ghost of the gothic is now resurrected in the critical methodologies which investigate it for the revelation of buried cultural secrets.
In this cogent analysis of the rise and fall of the gothic as a popular form, Kilgour juxtaposes the writings of William Godwin with Mary Wollstonecraft, and Ann Radcliffe with Matthew Lewis. She concludes with a close reading of the quintessential gothic novel, Mary Shelley's Frankenstein.
An impressive and highly original study, The Rise of the Gothic Novel is an invaluable contribution to the continuing literary debates which surround this influential genre.

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Information

Publisher
Routledge
Year
2013
ISBN
9781317761891
Edition
1

Part I

1 The Nature of Gothic

DOI: 10.4324/9781315800226-1
One of the powerful images conjured up by the words ‘gothic novel’ is that of a shadowy form rising from a mysterious place: Frankenstein’s monster rising from the laboratory table, Dracula creeping from his coffin, or, more generally, the slow opening of a crypt to reveal a dark and obscure figure. This iconography has haunted various critical representations of the rise of the genre. The imagery supports psychoanalytical critics’ contention that the gothic reflects the return of the repressed, in which subconscious psychic energy bursts out from the restraints of the conscious ego. The emergence of the gothic in the eighteenth century has also been read as a sign of the resurrection of the need for the sacred and transcendent in a modern enlightened secular world which denies the existence of supernatural forces, or as the rebellion of the imagination against the tyranny of reason. Recent historical studies have positioned the genre more specifically in relation to the rise of the middle class and the novel proper, with which that class has been identified, since Ian Watt especially. In general, the gothic has been associated with a rebellion against a constraining neoclassical aesthetic ideal of order and unity, in order to recover a suppressed primitive and barbaric imaginative freedom. Until recently therefore, the gothic novel has often been treated also as a kind of generic missing link between the romance and the novel, a very low road to Scott, whose rise is a deviation in the evolutionary chain that leads from Enlightenment to Romanticism. Manifesting prematurely, and therefore understandably somewhat crudely, the emerging values of Romanticism – an interest in the bizarre, eccentric, wild, savage, lawless, and transgressive, in originality and the imagination – the gothic itself is a transitional and rather puerile form which is superseded by the more mature ‘high’ art of the superior Romantics, such as Coleridge, Keats, and, especially, Byron who both realises and renders redundant the gothic hero–villain. Like so many of its hero–villains, its development is one of rapid rise and fall, which occurs roughly between 1760 and 1820.
This developmental model plays an important part both in critical discussions of the rise of the gothic and in the novels themselves. However, one of the factors that makes the gothic so shadowy and nebulous a genre, as difficult to define as any gothic ghost, is that it cannot be seen in abstraction from the other literary forms from whose graves it arises, or from its later descendants who survive after its demise, such as the detective novel and horror movie. It feeds upon and mixes the wide range of literary sources out of which it emerges and from which it never fully disentangles itself: British folklore, ballads, romance, Elizabethan and Jacobean tragedy (especially Shakespeare), Spenser, Milton, Renaissance ideas of melancholy, the graveyard poets, Ossian, the sublime, sentimental novelists (notably Prevost, Richardson, and Rousseau), and German traditions (especially Schiller’s Robbers and Ghost-Seer).The form is thus itself a Frankenstein’s monster, assembled out of the bits and pieces of the past. While it therefore can at times seem hopelessly naive and simple, it is, at its best, a highly wrought, artificial form which is extremely self-conscious of its artificiality and creation out of old material and traditions. The narratives of Walpole, Radcliffe, Maturin, Stoker, as well as Shelley, thematise their own piecemeal construction, drawing attention to the relation of the story and unfolding of the plot. Gothic creation thus suggests a view of the imagination not as an originating faculty that creates ex nihilo, but as a power of combination. As one charitable reviewer noted in relation to Matthew Lewis’s ‘borrowings’ from other texts (which later critics have occasionally, though not always accurately, identified as plagiarism): ‘the great art of writing consists in selecting what is most stimulant from the works of our predecessors, and in uniting the gathered beauties in a new whole, more interesting than the tributary models. This is the essential process of the imagination
. All invention is but new combination.’1 Gothic creation is a Frankensteinian process, as described also by Mary Shelley in her 1831 preface to her own textual monster: ‘Invention, it must be humbly admitted, does not consist in creating out of a void, but out of chaos; the materials must, in the first place, be afforded; it can give form to dark, shapeless substances, but cannot bring into being the substance itself.’2
Gothic criticism often inverts this creation of a whole from fragments: what the writer puts together, the critic pulls apart. It seems easier to identify a gothic novel by its properties than by an essence, so that analysis of the form often devolves into a cataloguing of stock characters and devices which are simply recycled from one text to the next: conventional settings (one castle – preferably in ruins; some gloomy mountains – preferably the Alps; a haunted room that locks only on the outside) and characters (a passive and persecuted heroine, a sensitive and rather ineffectual hero, a dynamic and tyrannical villain, an evil prioress, talkative servants). However, this dismemberment of the text seems often justified by narrative incoherence, which has been the subject of much critical complaint, and generally leads to the denigration of the form for its lack of aesthetic unity. Made up of these assorted bits and pieces, gothic novels often seem to disintegrate into fragments, irrelevant digressions, set-pieces of landscape description which never refer back to the central point. Such a tendency towards dismemberment may be encouraged by the fact that they also often look to lyric poetry and painting as models for their own mode of representation. At times the gothic seems hardly a unified narrative at all, but a series of framed conventions, static moments of extreme emotions – displayed by characters or in the landscape, and reproduced in the reader – which are tenuously strung together in order to be temporised both through and into narrative, but which do not form a coherent and continuous whole.
Given its corporate identity, it may not be surprising that the gothic seems also a confused and self-contradictory form, ambivalent or unsure about its own aims and implications. Criticism has reflected these contradictions. Some modern critics have wanted to assert its psychological complexity; Robert Hume claimed that ‘Robert Lovelace is a simpler character than Lewis’s Ambrosio’, a somewhat outrageous statement which seems to reflect a desire to vindicate the form according to inappropriate criteria.3 Others have agreed with J.M.S. Tompkins that the gothic is simplistic in its representation of character, which it subordinates to plot, scenery, and moralising. According to Tompkins: ‘The fates of the human beings merely illustrate the nature of these places, while they themselves make the story and brood over it. The intricate plots of the romances are mainly a working-out of the suggestions of mountain scenery and Gothic architecture.’4 Critics who agree on this point, however, still debate its implications. Elizabeth Napier argues that this focus on surfaces reveals that the gothic, far from being psychologically profound, is a shallow and superficial form.5 According to Robert Keily, however, the subordination of person to place enables the gothic to explore ‘the whole concept of individual identity’, to show ‘human personality as essentially unstable, inconsistent’.6 William Patrick Day similarly reads it as reflective of a fragmented fable of identity, while for Robert Miles it is a site, a ‘carnivalesque’ mode which represents ‘the subject finding itself dispossessed in its own home, in a condition of rupture, disjunction, fragmentation’.7 Recent criticism has often focused on the gothic’s fragmentation as a response to bourgeois models of personal, sexual, and textual identity, seeing it as a Frankensteinian deconstruction of modern ideology.8
Ian Watt, however, argues that superficiality is due to the displacement of complexity from characters onto the readers’ response to the situations presented,9 as the gothic’s main concern is not to depict character but to create a feeling or effect in its readers by placing them in a state of thrilling suspense and uncertainty. From its origins, the gothic has been defined in terms of this peculiar and palpable effect upon its audience. As a result, it has also frequently been involved in discussions concerning the relation of art to life, aesthetics to ethics. With its cast of extreme characters, unnatural settings and perverse plots, the gothic played a significant part in late eighteenth-century debates over the moral dangers of reading. Such debates were of a partially political origin, in England looking back to Milton’s argument in Areopagitica, a text much cited in the eighteenth century. From the seventeenth century on, with the rise of literacy and the increase of the press, reading became a focal point in debates over authority and self-determination; indeed, it became identified with self-determination. Originating in the Protestant ideal that every man had the right to read the scripture for himself, a right viewed with some concern in the seventeenth century with the rise of dissenting movements (which sometimes even extended that right to women), the idea that to read for oneself was the property of the self-governing individual permeated discussions of both literature and politics. At the same time, however, there was a mistrust of the reader’s ability to handle this heavy responsibility, and a wariness of the potentially pernicious influence of literature on a broad but naive market. The spread of literacy, the growth of a largely female and middle-class readership and of the power of the press, increased fears that literature could be a socially subversive influence. Prose fiction was particularly suspect: romances, for giving readers unrealistic expectations of an idealised life, novels for exposing them to the sordidness of an unidealised reality.
As a hybrid between the novel and romance, the gothic was accused on both accounts. The gothic was seen as encouraging a particularly intimate and insidious relationship between text and reader, by making the reader identify with what he or she read. As one contemporary reviewer said of Radcliffe: ‘it may be true that her persons are cold and formal; but her readers are the virtual heroes and heroines of her story as they read.’10 According to Scott as well, the purpose of the gothic author was ‘to wind up the feelings of his reader till they become for a moment identified with those of a ruder age’.11 Ideally, this identification served a moral purpose, as it allowed readers to exercise safely and so educate their emotions; the danger was when the means became an end in itself. To many early concerned critics, gothic novels were the unlicensed indulgence of an amoral imagination that was a socially subversive force. The possibility that the gothic represented simply a fairy-tale world created by an imagination, an artistic aesthetic realm that was completely irrelevant and detached from the social order and norms, made it more, rather than less, threatening. The escapist imagination was denounced as corruptive of family values, as, when uncontrolled by reason, it rendered the vulnerable proverbial ‘young person’ unfit for real life. The art that is completely fanciful, an autonomous creation that does not refer to reality, offers a tempting alternative to the mundaneness of everyday life. It was feared that readers of fictions, seduced by the enticing charms of an illusory world, would lose either their grip on or their taste for reality: ‘the false expectations these wild scenes excite, tend to debauch the mind, and throw an insipid kind of uniformity over the moderate and rational prospects of life, consequently adventures are sought for and created, when duties are neglected and content despised.’12 Too much mental stimulation of the sensibilities was seen as producing insensibility and apathy in real life. As Coleridge warned, novel-reading may be ‘especially injurious to the growth of the imagination, the judgment, and the morals, especially to the latter, because it excites mere feelings without at the same time ministering to an impulse to action 
 they afford excitement without producing reaction’.13 Imagination and appetite are too closely connected, and reading itself a way of feeding destructive and anti-social desires. The ill consequences of reading works which fill ‘the mind with extravagant thoughts and too often with criminal propensities’14 are dramatised in numerous gothic stories in which the heroine is the victim of her own imagination and sensibility, indulged in reading, through which she loses the ability to differentiate between art and life.15
Some of the most powerful critiques of the force of the gothic appear within the gothic, which internalised external criticism, both in stories such as those described above, and in tales of works of art that take on lives of their own. As I will discuss further (see pp. 85–7; 156–8), in its various versions of the familiar Pygmalion myth, the gothic seems to both represent and punish the imagination’s power to realise its own desires. It therefore seems also to denounce precisely the transgressive qualities with which it was associated. While to earlier conservative moralists the gothic’s offer of an imaginative retreat from reality was seen as a potentially amoral subversion of social order, to many modern critics this, contradictorily, has proved it to be a reactionary, socially conservative form. In the Radcliffean model, especially, the imagination is indulged through suspense, only to be ultimately contained, imprisoned by the final authority of morality, in which the good and bad are separated out by a poetically just system of rewards and punishments. The gothic appears to suggest that the inevitable can only be pleasurably, and fictitiously, deferred for a time, as the domestic sphere is the only appropriate end of a woman’s adventures: whether that woman be the heroine or the reader herself, who, the thrilling adventure of reading over, closes the book and returns to her daily duties. The gothic thus both represents in the story of its heroine and offers to its readers a momentary subversion of order that is followed by the restoration of a norm, which, after the experience of terror, now seems immensely desirable.16 Reading is thus a dangerously conservative substitute for political and social action, offering an illusory transformation to impede real change by making women content with their lot, and keeping them at home – reading.
Like the carnivalesque, the gothic appears to be a transgressive rebellion against norms which yet ends up reinstating them, an eruption of unlicensed desire that is fully controlled by governing systems of limitation.17 It delights in rebellion, while finally punishing it, often with death or damnation, and the reaffirmation of a system of moral and social order. However, the fact that the endings are often, as Robert Keily notes,18 unsatisfactory when compared to the delicious experience of the middle of the text, might in itself suggest a radical, antiteleological, model for reading, in which closure, which necessarily involves some restabilisation of categories, is deprivileged. For Sir Walter Scott, the notorious dissatisfaction of Radcliffe’s endings could not diminish our pleasure in the rest of the text, and ‘the impression of general delight which we have received for the perusal remains unabated’.19 The dissatisfaction of the moral at the end in fact forces us to focus on the aesthetic pleasure of the middle.
Some recent critics have claimed further that in its potential as a vehicle for female anger the gothic provides a ‘plot of feminine subversion’.20 Its escape from the real world has a deeper moral purpose, as distance enables literature to become an indirect critique of things as they are; in Punter’s nicely gothic description, the gothic is ‘not an escape from the real but a deconstruction and dismemberment of it’.21 The female gothic itself is not a ratification but an exposĂ© of domesticity and the family, through the technique of estrangement or romantic defamiliarisation: by cloaking familiar images of domesticity in gothic forms, it enables us to see that the home is a prison, in which the helpless female is at the mercy of ominous patriarchal authorities. For Kenneth Graham, therefore, the gothic generally: ‘was as rebellious in letters as its contemporary parallel in France was in politics. It challenged fundamental notions of aesthetics and psychology.’22
More critics argue, however, that whatever radical and subversive implications the gothic might have are radically limited by its own inconsistencies. Coral Ann Howells attributes the contradictory nature of the gothic to the fact that: ‘Gothic novelists didn’t know what to do with their own feelings of frustration and rebelliousness
. Their fiction is both exploratory and fearful. They are not always totally in control of their fantasies, for having opened up new areas ...

Table of contents

  1. The Rise of the Gothic Novel
  2. Acknowledgements
  3. Part I
  4. The Nature of Gothic
  5. Past and Present
  6. The Sublime and the Odd
  7. Everything that Rises Must Converge
  8. Part II
  9. Godwin and the Gothic of Revolution
  10. The Reveries of a Solitary Woman
  11. The Chymicall Wedding and the Bourgeois Marriage
  12. Part III
  13. From Here to Here: Radcliffe's Plot of Female Development
  14. Lewis's Gothic Revolution
  15. 'A way thus dark and circuitous': The Revolution Comes Full Circle
  16. Part IV
  17. The Artist as Goth
  18. The Rise of Gothic Criticism
  19. Notes
  20. Bibliography
  21. Index