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Visions of Evil

Origins of Violence in the English Gothic Novel

by Martin-Christoph Just (Author)
©1997 Thesis 340 Pages

Summary

In this thesis, which strives to re-focus the view on a seminal era of English literature, four major Gothic Novels are subjected to a thorough textual analysis. The central hypothesis is that the superior Gothic Novels are finely honed psychological studies which concentrate on the moral deterioration of individual characters. This deterioration leads to different forms of destructive social interaction: it causes psychotic behaviour patterns, violence directed against oneself, and sexual abuse of others. The Gothicists show persons who in an austere patriarchal society develop strategies to satisfytheir personal, essentially anti-social needs. The major Gothic Novels unmask bourgeois society as a system which creates the frame conditions for indulgence of public and private violence, and thus fails to fulfil its original task of providing shelter for the individual.

Details

Pages
340
Year
1997
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631316962
Language
English
Published
Frankfurt/M., Berlin, Bern, New York, Paris, Wien, 1997. 340 pp.

Biographical notes

Martin-Christoph Just (Author)

The Author: Martin-Christoph Just studied English, History and Sociology at Hannover and Liverpool. With this thesis he graduated from the University of Hannover. The focus of his studies is on the analysis of literary accounts of psychological phenomena, in particular the origins and modes of violence and sexual deviation.

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Title: Visions of Evil