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ELA 11: 3.1 Gothic-Romanticism 393 Views
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Transcript
- 00:02
Before there were romance novels about heroes in kilts and
- 00:07
heroines with unlikely relationship problems there were romantic novels and [Woman hanging onto the edge of a cliff]
- 00:12
no the two are not the same. You're probably familiar with a number of
- 00:15
writers from the Romantic era, there's Jane Austen, the Bronte sisters, and poets [Picture of Jane Austen]
- 00:21
like Byron, Wordsworth and Keats. You've also probably noticed that all of these
Full Transcript
- 00:25
guys and gals were English. Yeah England's a romantic place you know [English flag]
- 00:29
must be all the bangers and mash. (Laughing) While there were romantics on the other [Man wearing a bowler hat holding plates of bangers and mash]
- 00:33
side of the pond the most famous American authors of this genre were
- 00:37
different from their English brethren in that they liked to paint their [Weirdly dressed man in front of the US flag]
- 00:41
fingernails black and brood to the tunes of My Chemical Romance. [Someone painting their fingernails black in front of a typewriter]
- 00:46
See these guys weren't just romantics, they were Gothic romantics.
- 00:51
Well how is Gothic Romanticism different from Romanticism?
- 00:55
Well romanticism was a movement that rebelled against the enlightenment and [A couple bungee jumping together]
- 00:59
its tendency to value reason above all else. Emotion was the name of the game
- 01:04
for the romantics and horror and dread in particular were the emotional
- 01:08
bread-and-butter of the Gothic romantics. Well why not, fear is an emotion. The [Gothic man holding a loaf of bread that says horror and butter that says dread]
- 01:13
gothic novels of American writers like Edgar Allan Poe were essentially scary
- 01:17
stories replete with creepy settings and supernatural murder mad forces. [Ghost of a woman holding a bloody knife floating around]
- 01:24
In fact Gothic Romantic authors paid so much attention to their
- 01:28
settings that the settings tended to become characters in their own right, [Gothic house looking angry]
- 01:32
which explains why we feel the way we do about the House of Usher. In short we're
- 01:37
not going to do a book weekend getaway there. Yeah, different Usher... [The singer 'Usher' stood in front of the house of Usher]
- 01:42
You've probably read a gothic romantic story or two and not realized it [Boy reading a book]
- 01:46
The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving
- 01:49
yeah well it's got the Headless Horseman a ghost who likes to show up out of
- 01:53
nowhere and scare the bejesus out of skinny schoolteachers and it's set in a [Scared looking woman]
- 01:57
secluded village with a long history of witches, wizards and ghosts. [A wizard a witch and a ghost]
- 02:02
And what about Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter well in that novel we
- 02:06
have a minister Arthur Dimmesdale who's so tortured by the fact that he slept [Minister pacing around a church]
- 02:11
with Hester Prynne yeah sorry that was a spoiler alert, that he
- 02:14
essentially dies of guilt, poor guy. Getting annihilated by your darker [Minister falls over and dies]
- 02:18
emotions is a clear hallmark of a good gothic romantic tale or a bad Lars von [The Grim Reaper chasing after a man]
- 02:24
Trier film all right pal just keepin it real.
- 02:26
We've already mentioned Edgar Allan Poe but really he was so good at his
- 02:30
genre that he's worth mentioning again. Poe poe poe poe poe! He wrote the Cask of [Picture of Poe]
- 02:34
Amontillado, where the narrator walled the guy off in a dungeon. [Man disappears behind a wall]
- 02:38
He wrote the mask of the Red Death where a ton of people at a party drop dead of
- 02:42
the plague, he wrote the tell-tale heart where a murderer confesses because he
- 02:47
thinks he can still hear his victims heart beating, turns out it was just the [Man confessing to a police officer and rocking back and forth]
- 02:51
ringtone on his iPhone, how embarrassing. Anyway so grab your candle, a spare pair
- 02:56
of undies and your sense of self-preservation it's about to get [Woman looking scared holding a candle and pants]
- 03:00
gloomy up in here. [Scary looking skeleton face]
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