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ELA 12: 1.25 Going Gothic and Wearing Headphones 47 Views
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Description:
Gothic novels are all about perspective... who needs a silver lining when you've got this beautiful, big, spooky thundercloud?
Transcript
- 00:02
Have you ever been reading a book and thought well this story's okay and the [girl frantically reading a book in a library]
- 00:07
characters are fine but where are the ghosts and the vampires and couldn't it
- 00:10
include at least few scenes in a graveyard yeah so we might just have the
- 00:15
genre for you called Gothic literature well above all Gothic literature is a [girl reading a book and man behind picks up a Gothic literature book]
- 00:20
genre known for spookiness that means not only real-world spookiness you know
Full Transcript
- 00:26
your bats, your cobwebs, your creepy folks and dark castles but also spooky
- 00:30
supernatural elements whether those are ghosts vampires or other kinds of spooky [examples of gothic literature elements]
- 00:34
monsters well you're unlikely to find those kinds of monsters in say legal
- 00:38
thrillers so it's nice that they have a home anyway believe it or not gothic [man with wolf head approaches judge's bench in court]
- 00:42
authors are interested in one of the fundamental concepts of romantic
- 00:45
literature the sublime just because they like bats doesn't mean they can't be [Bram Stoker stood outside a castle and a bat appears]
- 00:51
romantic too as you might recall experiencing the sublime is that
- 00:54
feeling of being overwhelmed and almost terrified though for gothic authors the
- 00:59
emphasis is definitely on the terrified part so whereas a traditional romantic [Lord Byron on a mountainside with a sign for 'Ooh Aah Point']
- 01:02
might prefer the beautiful view from the edge of a canyon the Gothic would be
- 01:06
enthralled by a terrifying monster attack and surprisingly Grand Canyon [Lord Byron on a mountainside attacked by a monster]
- 01:11
National Park has never hired a gothic writer to make their brochures wonder
- 01:15
why well if we've got a book and we're curious as to whether or not it's a [A boy in a library and a Tale of Stories book appears]
- 01:18
gothic novel well there are certain elements we can look for for one gothic
- 01:23
novels have a spooky setting yep these novels are usually set nightmarish [dark misty clouds pass by the moon]
- 01:28
places like graveyards, old churches, ruined medieval castles and well just
- 01:33
plain old ruins basically places that tend not to have really high property [Man stood beside a for sale sign]
- 01:38
values gothic novels are even sometimes set in creepier natural settings
- 01:42
like the English Moors or an overgrown forest on a dark and stormy night [Misty English moors and a dark windy forest]
- 01:47
relatively few gothic novels are set at well say at a football training camp
- 01:51
and spooky monsters and team sports don't tend to get along. Another element that [Monster on a football pitch tackled by a football player]
- 01:55
often crops up is the supernatural no not that TV show with the weirdly pretty
- 02:00
people fighting against evil we're talking ghosts vampires zombies
- 02:03
and other monsters but I'll give us a sense that evil is lurking just around [Man enters and is scared by a ghost, zombie and vampire]
- 02:07
the corner they're much more effective at evoking this feeling than puppies or
- 02:11
baby pandas as cute as they might be finally gothic
- 02:14
novels often play off the idea that the world is full of evil which as you'd
- 02:18
imagine make the world a not-so-great place to live [Earth opens up and Evil is inside]
- 02:21
well it's not just that bad things happen it's that they shatter former
- 02:25
sights of happiness like evil pins and non evil balloons and as far as bad
- 02:30
things go well there's almost nothing higher on our list an unexpected balloon [A clown using a pin to pop a balloon]
- 02:34
popper uh-huh terrifying
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