Research Paper on Authers
Essay title: Research Paper on Authers
Into the Twisted minds we go into the thoughts of horror writes minds we go don’t look back its to late now, your stuck in this sick and twisted minds hope a bottle of Bravery for what your about to see will SHOCK you. The low down on King, Stine, and Preston the one thing I have seen that they have incomin is they where all born up north, King in Maine, Stine in Ohio, Preston in Massachusetts, they all married some with links to publishing companies, they all started writing for magazines and would send in there works and read comics that there parents found stupid or in appropriate they all married and where teachers at one point, except Preston he never was a teacher.
How I came to choose King, Stine, and Preston when I heard about this paper King and Stine instantly popped into my head, Preston I had to search I saw him listed several times on websites for horror on his new novel The Cobra Event so I debated and thought well I can learn some thing new about some I will never meet or get to know personally, I new King had a lot of stuff about him and Stine is more a keep the personally stuff to himself kinda guy I have found it rather difficult to dig up stuff on him but what can you expect he writes for children why would they care about his life, Preston he puts stuff out there that gives a vague idea of what his life was like.
A brief description of gothic style writings “Often criticized for its sensationalism, melodramatic qualities, and its play on the supernatural, the Gothic novel dominated English literature from its conception in 1764 with the publication of The Castle of Otranto by Horace Walpole to its supposed demise in 1820. The genre drew many of its intense images from the graveyard poets intermingling a landscape of vast dark forest with vegetation that bordered on excessive, concealed ruins with horrific rooms, monasteries and a forlorn character who excels at the melancholy.
A fabled spectre or perhaps a bleeding Nun were images often sought after by those who fell victim to the supernatural influences of these books. Gothic literature as a movement was a disappointment to the idealistic romantic poets for the sentimental character idealized by Ann Radcliffe could not transcend into reality.
The modern critical view of the Gothic canon limits it to a set of high reaching artistic achievements: Horace Walpoles The Castle of Otranto (1764), Ann Radcliffes The Italian; or, The Confessional of the Black Penitents (1797), Mary Shelleys Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus (1818) and Charles Maturins Melmoth the Wanderer (1820) are cited as the defining parameters of the genre.
Although the Gothic novel influenced many of the emerging genres, like romanticism, the outpouring of Gothic novels started to ease by 1815 and with the publication of Charles Maturins Melmoth the Wanderer in 1820 ,the genre began to fade. The Gothic novel had come full circle, from rebellion to the Age of Reasons order, to its encompassing and incorporation of Reason as derived from terror. The influence of the Gothic novel is felt today in the portrayal of the alluring antagonist, whose evil characteristics appeal to ones sense of awe, or the melodramatic aspects of romance, or more specifically in the Gothic motif of a persecuted maiden forced apart from a true love.
The Gothic genre today has remained an elusive minor literary upheaval that has had immense influence on genres today. Literary critics though, have been slow to accept Gothic literature as a valuable genre. The first critics to examine the Gothic, approached it reverently with historical interest. They tried to rescue it, to revive the dead and obscure genre. These critics looked at the presence of the text by examining it within a historical context. The original critical approach of historical interpretation allowed the text to validate the text, as it was a reaction to the age of reason, order, and politics of Eighteenth century England.
The development of the Gothic Novel from the melancholy overtures of sentimental literature to the rise of the sublime in the graveyard poets had a profound impact on the budding Romantic movement from Wordsworth to Shelley. The astounding features and use of the sublime and the overt use of the supernatural, profoundly influenced the style and material of the emerging romantics. Gothic Novels such as The Castle of Otranto by Horace Walpole, The Adventures of Ferdinand Count Fathom by Tobias Smollett, Longsword, Earl of Salisbury by Thomas Leland, The Old English Baron: A Gothic Story by Clara Reeve and Vathek: An Arabian Tale by William Beckford led Coleridge to write a Gothic drama, Shelley to write two Gothic Novels and Byron to write Manfred.
The effects of the Gothic still reverberate though modern literature from Joyce Carol Oats to Ann Rice. The literary motifs