Honors English 12------The Gothic Novel---for reading Rebecca
M.H. Abrams
The Gothic novel, or "Gothic romance" . . . flourished through the early
nineteenth century. Authors of such novels set their stories in the medieval
period, often in a gloomy castle replete with dungeons, subterranean passages,
and sliding panels, and made plentiful use of ghosts, mysterious disappearances,
and other sensational and supernatural occurrences; their principal aim was to
evoke chilling terror by exploiting mystery, cruelty, and a variety of horrors.
The term "gothic" has also been extended to denote a type of fiction which lacks
the medieval setting but develops a brooding atmosphere of gloom or terror,
represents events which are uncanny, or macabre, or melodramatically violent,
and often deals with aberrant psychological states. (adapted from A Glossary
of Literary Terms)
A Byronic hero exhibits several characteristic traits, and in many ways he can be considered a rebel. The Byronic hero does not possess "heroic virtue" in the usual sense; instead, he has many dark qualities. With regard to his intellectual capacity, self-respect, and hypersensitivity, the Byronic hero is "larger than life," and "with the loss of his titanic passions, his pride, and his certainty of self-identity, he loses also his status as [a traditional] hero" (Thorslev 187).
He is usually isolated from society as a wanderer or is in exile of some kind. It does not matter whether this social separation is imposed upon him by some external force or is self-imposed. Byron's Manfred, a character who wandered desolate mountaintops, was physically isolated from society, whereas Childe Harold chose to "exile" himself and wander throughout Europe. Although Harold remained physically present in society and among people, he was not by any means "social."
Often the Byronic hero is moody by nature or passionate about a particular issue. He also has emotional and intellectual capacities, which are superior to the average man. These heightened abilities force the Byronic hero to be arrogant, confident, abnormally sensitive, and extremely conscious of himself. Sometimes, this is to the point of nihilism resulting in his rebellion against life itself (Thorslev 197). In one form or another, he rejects the values and moral codes of society and because of this he is often unrepentant by society's standards. Often the Byronic hero is characterized by a guilty memory of some unnamed sexual crime. Due to these characteristics, the Byronic hero is often a figure of repulsion, as well as fascination.