American Gothic Essay

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    as the subjects for many of Bruegel’s paintings, including The Peasant Dance in 1567. Lower class people have been the subject of paintings many times since Bruegel, however one painting that shares its ambiguity is Grant Wood’s 1930 painting American Gothic. The ambiguity stems from the uncertainty of whether these paintings are critiquing or celebrating their subjects. Bruegel was so well known for painting the lower class; it was often believed that he was a member himself. He, however, was merely

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    in ‘American Gothic’–at least in the two sequences cited above–is the decay of the familiar: inevitable, persistent, insidious, ever-present and perhaps most frighteningly, contagious.”. Using two modern examples to support his argument, American Horror Story, and The Walking Dead, he breaks down the key component of American Gothic; the unfamiliar. It’s the fact that we don’t know, is what makes the American Gothic so believable and intriguing and it’s because of this very reason American Gothic

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    The Coquette Analysis

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    I intend to write about Hannah W. Foster’s novel The Coquette. I want to focus on gothic elements that can be found in her text even before gothic novels came around since sentimental novels were the precursor to gothic novels. Therefore, I will be analyzing the “proto-gothic” elements Foster used. I want to look into the fear that she nonetheless created in this realistic society, which eventually, in a way, led to the protagonist’s death teaching the readers a moral lesson overall on societal expectations

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    Gothic Comparison

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    Gothic Comparison     Gothic literature is often composed of various types of mysterious and dark elements. The writer usually adds these different elements to express a more eerie and complex story to the reader to comprehend the underlying components within the story. A famous gothic writer who is known for using these elements brilliantly in his work is Edgar Allen Poe. He is known for his many works of cryptic and enigmatic stories. Edgar Allen Poe’s stories are considered old classics of gothic

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    1989 essay delineating how Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper” functions as a Gothic allegory, Greg Johnson describes Gilman’s achievement as yet awaiting its “due recognition” and her compelling short story as being “[s]till under-read, still haunting the margins of the American literary canon” (530).1 Working from the premise that Gilman’s tale “adroitly and at times parodically employs Gothic conventions to present an allegory of literary imagination unbinding the social, domestic

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    Brown does not rely on most of the conventions of the gothic literature. Brown does use conventions of a Gothic genre. Brown follows the topics shared in an American Gothic novel. Allan Lloyd-Smith talks about how many American Gothic writers would exchange key aspects that can be seen in a European gothic novel. For example, instead of a castle the setting of the novel will include a remote house in the country side away from most of the population. Brown does not include a great deal of the setting

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    The grotesque in gothic is usually the behavior of a man (or women,) who battle with an internal conflict and they are also, usually sick. When an individual reads gothic stories, one can sometimes miss-interpret what they have read. It is common knowledge that when we are younger we understand things differently from when we grot be adults. We can infer that if one was too read gothic literature as a child, one would find it humorous, versus if that individual was to read gothic literature as an

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    Reaper's Image

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    American Gothic literature is one of the most fascinating pieces of literature to read. The short story, “The Reaper’s Image”, is about a museum manager, Spangler, who wishes to purchase a so-called “haunted” mirror even after hearing the rumors about it. When they get to the mirror, Spangler tells himself and Mr. Carlin that he saw a something in the mirror because he does not want to admit that he saw the reaper. Just like the rumors of the glass Mr. Carlin told him about, Spangler leaves the room

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    characteristics of Gothicism as well as anti-Enlightenment thinking. The early nation had been exposed to many classical and rigid writers who wrote to inform rather than to entertain. When Brown emerged as the first Gothic American novelist, he as well as many other early American authors wrote using devices such as moralization in order to “upgrade fiction” (Nutter lecture). Hugh Holman explains that writers who did not hold themselves to the standard of classical thinking wrote in an unknown

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    Franklin Gothic has become a well known classic font. Since its creation, it has been used thousands of times in billboards, tv, books, board games, movies, logos and more. In fact, MoMa uses it today for most of these materials and is actually the front for their logo. Franklin Gothic is a bold san serif type with inspiration from Akzidenz Grotesk. It created by Morris Fuller Benton who created it for the American Type Founders Company. The typeface was given its name after Benjamin Franklin an

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