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Gothic Reader: A Critical Anthology | 
enlarge | Authors: Martin Myrone, Christopher Frayling Publisher: Tate Publishing Category: Book
List Price: £14.99 Buy New: £7.85 You Save: £7.14 (48%)
New (27) Used (10) from £5.93
Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 325705
Format: Illustrated Media: Paperback Pages: 320 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.1 x 0.9
ISBN: 1854375997 Dewey Decimal Number: 809 EAN: 9781854375995 ASIN: 1854375997
Publication Date: January 27, 2006 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
The Birth of Gothic Excavated October 25, 2007 James Rattue (Surrey, England) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Compiled to accompany the Tate Gallery's 'Gothic Nightmares' show in 2006, focusing on Fuseli and Blake, this book daunted me at first and it sat on the shelf for over a year before I got around to reading it. When I did, I found that, far from being a dry collection of near-incomprehensible 18th-century writings, it was thoroughly readable and fizzed and crackled with interest. It investigates the crucial epoch when the 'Gothic' sensibility was established through a well-chosen, and very wide-ranging rag-bag of extracts and contemporary comments, sprinkled with images from the exhibition itself, and by doing so traces the links Gothic had with elements already circulating in popular culture (old-fashioned ghost stories, for instance), the theory of the Sublime, and art. All of them combined to produce Georgian horror literature, that great outflowering of Gothic which has defined ever after what the term has meant. The book even makes 'The Castle of Udolpho' and 'Vathek' seem worth picking up and opening again, though I'm not sure I'll manage that. It is of course tied down to the scheme of the exhibition itself, but manages within that to be great fun. One quibble: 'A Gothic Reader' seems to have been very roughly proof-read. On one page I counted three typos in a single paragraph. Oops!
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