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Record ID harvard_bibliographic_metadata/ab.bib.12.20150123.full.mrc:423341392:4118
Source harvard_bibliographic_metadata
Download Link /show-records/harvard_bibliographic_metadata/ab.bib.12.20150123.full.mrc:423341392:4118?format=raw

LEADER: 04118cam a2200373 a 4500
001 012572758-5
005 20100921224517.0
008 091203s2010 ohua b 001 0 eng c
010 $a 2009050593
020 $a9780814211311 (cloth : alk. paper)
020 $a0814211313 (cloth : alk. paper)
020 $a9780814292303 (cd-rom)
020 $a0814292305 (cd-rom)
035 0 $aocn477272263
035 $a(PromptCat)40018274245
040 $aOU/DLC$cDLC$dYDX$dYDXCP$dBWX$dCDX
042 $apcc
043 $ae------
050 00 $aPN3435$b.H59 2010
082 00 $a809/.9164$222
100 1 $aHoeveler, Diane Long.
245 10 $aGothic riffs :$bsecularizing the uncanny in the European imaginary, 1780-1820 /$cDiane Long Hoeveler.
260 $aColumbus :$bOhio State University Press,$cc2010.
300 $axx, 289 p. :$bill. ;$c24 cm.
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 0 $aGothic riffs: songs in the key of secularization -- Gothic mediations: Shakespeare, the sentimental, and the secularization of virtue -- "Rescue operas" and providential deism -- Ghostly visitants: the gothic drama and the coexistence of immanence and transcendence -- Entr'acte. Melodramatizing the gothic: the case of Thomas Holcroft -- The gothic ballad and blood sacrifice: from Bürger to Wordsworth -- The gothic chapbook: the class-based circulation of the unexplained supernatural.
520 1 $a""In Gothic Riffs, Diane Long Hoeveler inverts the traditional interpretation of the rise of the Gothic. Hers is a new, and significant, argument. She shows, with great effectiveness and originality, the ubiquity of Gothic in popular and high art forms alike, from opera, to ballads, to chapbooks, as trans-European phenomena. I know of no modern work that aims to bring all of these different fields together in one impressively extensive book."--Robert Miles, professor and chair, Department of English, the University of Victoria" ""Diane Long Hoeveler's Gothic Riffs is genuinely innovative, informative, and insightful within the fields of both Gothic and Romantic literary studies. Indeed, this book should come to occupy a special niche of its own in the proliferating explosion of scholarship on the many kinds of Gothic that have continued to grow since the 1980s."--Jerrold E. Hogle, University Distinguished Professor, The University of Arizona".
520 8 $a"Gothic Riffs: Secularizing the Uncanny in the European Imaginary, 1780-1820 by Diane Long Hoeveler provides the first comprehensive study of what are called "collateral gothic" genres--operas, ballads, chapbooks, dramas, and melodramas--that emerged out of the gothic novel tradition founded by Horace Walpole, Matthew Lewis, and Ann Radcliffe. The role of religion and its more popular manifestations, superstition and magic, in the daily lives of Western Europeans were effectively undercut by the forces of secularization that were gaining momentum on every front, particularly by 1800. It is clear, however, that the lower class and the emerging bourgeoisie were loath to discard their traditional beliefs. We can see their search for a sense of transcendent order and spiritual meaning in the continuing popularity of gothic performances that demonstrate that there was more than a residue of a religious calendar still operating in the public performative realm. Because this bourgeois culture could not turn away from God, it chose to be haunted, in its literature and drama, by God's uncanny avatars: priests, corrupt monks, incestuous fathers and uncles. The gothic aesthetic emerged during this period as an ideologically contradictory and complex discourse system; a secularizing of the uncanny; a way of alternately valorizing and at the same time slandering the realms of the supernatural, the sacred, the maternal, and the primitive"--BOOK JACKET.
650 0 $aGothic revival (Literature)$xInfluence.
650 0 $aGothic revival (Literature)$xHistory and criticism.
650 0 $aGothic fiction (Literary genre)$xHistory and criticism.
899 $a415_565536
988 $a20100921
906 $0OCLC