an invocation of the sensually gothic    
     
   
 
2006 | 2007
January February March April
       
       
 
January Days 2007
 
1 Baby New Year
2 video: 'Stupid' by Sarah McLachlan
3 video: 'Train' by Goldfrapp
4 The art of Drew Struzan
5 Gore legend Herschell Gordon Lewis
6 video: Pink Floyd's Astronomy Domine
7 The Monk - Lust, Murder and Blasphemy
8 The Iron Maiden of Nuremburg
9 video: Led Zeppelin's Kashmir
10 The Northanger Horrid Novels
11 The Castle of Wolfenbach
12 Clermont - A Northanger Horrid Novel
13 The Mystery of the Black Tower
14 The Forest of Valancourt
15 The Mysteries of Udolpho
16 In Maremma - Early Gothic by Ouida
17 video: 'Nymphetamine' by Cradle of Filth
18 'Everything's Wonderful' by Abby Travis
19 Ascending Descending by M.C. Escher
20 Procession in Crypt by M.C. Escher
21 Dream Mantis (Religiosa) by M.C. Escher
22 Encounter, art by M.C. Escher
23 short film: Man Without Eyes
24 scenes from Eyes Without a Face
25 video: Genesis: Second Home by the Sea
26 On A Dead Child by Richard Middleton
27 The Ghoul Queen by Brom
28 Ghoul Queen by Frank Frazetta
29 video: Peter Gabriel's Shock the Monkey
30 Priestess of Delphi by John Collier
31 Siren and the Fisherman by Leighton
 
 
January 10, 2007
 
Jane Austen and the Horrid Novels of Northanger Abbey

Gothic novels inspired the first book ever published by Jane Austen and became a focus of literary detective work when seven titles she described as 'horrid' in Northanger Abbey were discovered to be actual novels of her time, and not just coined titles she had invented.

In Northanger Abbey, Austen satirizes the Gothic novels that were immensely popular in her time by inventing a character named Catherine Morland, a 17 year old girl who not only reads Gothic tales religiously, but who begins to weave the fearful expectations inherent in the genre into her daily life.

Catherine is invited to stay with friends at Northanger Abbey, and her runaway imagination reads frightening implications into a series of unexplained occurrences in the otherwise harmless seeming estate.

At one point in the story, an acquaintance recommends to Catherine a list of seven Gothic novels which have come to be known as 'The Northanger horrid novels.' (In Austen's day the term 'horrid' was meant for something delightfully fearful or shocking.) Ann Radcliffe's Gothic classic The Mysteries of Udolpho is also mentioned in Austen's Northanger Abbey.

Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen jpg
 
 
The Northanger Horrid Novels
Castle of Wolfenbach by Eliza Parsons (1793)
Clermont by Regina Maria Roche (1798)
Midnight Bell by Francis Lathom (1798)
Orphan of the Rhine by Eleanor Sleath (1798)
Mysterious Warnings (1796)
Necromancer of the Black Forest (1794)
Horrid Mysteries by Peter Will (1796)
 
   
 
 
  Please support DarkRomance.com by shopping from our affiliate advertisers.  
 
 
Torrid - The Alternative For Sizes 12 - 26       Tripp at Hottopic.com  
 
s
[an error occurred while processing this directive]