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    A Short Story Analysis on C.P. Gilman’s The Yellow Wallpaper The short story entitled, “The Yellow Wallpaper” written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman was a gothic horror tale that was later viewed as a story utilizing symbolism to demonstrate repression and disapproval of Victorian patriarchy. This short story made her particularly important in this certain genre of story-writing (Meyering, 4). When the narrator was diagnosed with neurasthenia, which is the chronic mental and physical depression,…

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    The Fall of the House of Usher, by Edgar Allen Poe, uses a rational first-person narrative to illustrate the strange effects the Usher estate has on the three characters. Everything about the house is dark and eerily evil. The mansion appears to create fear, which is in turn, driving the occupants insane. The narrator of the story is a mysterious and challenging character to understand. The audience is never given the name of the narrator as his significance in the novel is mainly concerning…

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    Lui Napoles Pd.6 Damiel 01//12/16 Center V0006 Prompt : Examine how the authors use the theme of insanity in the stories: The Fall of the House of Usher, and A Rose for Emily. In the short stories of The Fall of the House of Usher by Edgar Allan Poe and A Rose for Emily by William Faulkner the theme of insanity has a place in both stories that is showed in due time. The Fall of the House of Usher has the narrator be one of the protagonist…

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    Throughout American literature, many stories have been stylistically written with the intention of instilling fear in a reader’s mind. To be specific, Edgar Allen Poe, acknowledged for his rather ominous and morbid stories achieves this effect in, The Fall of the House of Usher. With that in mind, Poe wrote, The Fall of the House of Usher through the usage of certain events and details which culminate to the ultimate effect of terror. While, The Fall of the House of Usher epitomizes a story’s…

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    Ralph Manning American Literature Mrs. Wilson 8 November 2015 Gothic Elements and Tone Analysis The Fall of The House of Usher uses strong gothic elements and strong imagery to develop a tone. The appearance is defined in a well-developed explanation. The house is old, cracked, and has an overall worn out appearance. A variety of gothic elements is used, as well as a distinct appearance with a well-established theme. The Fall of The House of Usher has a unique way of using elements to describe…

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    Poe was a very skilled nineteenth century gothic writer. In the Fall of the House of Usher Poe is obviously not yet adept at writing in Gothic style. But in one of his next works The Pit and the Pendulum Poe hits the Gothic mark quite nicely. Edgar A. Poe was indeed a Gothic writer pioneer, many of his works have lasted to present day. The stories of Fall of the House of Usher and The Pit and the Pendulum are two of Poes most striking Gothic Writings. In the fall of the House of Usher Poe…

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    Each house in Charles Dickens’ novel Great Expectations is made to be like the character that lives within it, to emphasize the personalities and characteristics of each person. When Pip first meets Miss Havisham, he thinks of her as weak and grotesque just like her house. He believes that she is just “a skeleton in ashes of a rich dress” (56); when he tours Satis House he is confronted by a house covered in “a great many iron bars” (53) and on the inside it’s filled with “ominous passages” (55)…

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    Gothic Literature

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    “Who entereth herein, a conqueror hath bin; Who slayeth the dragon, the shield he shall win.” (Poe, 1839) These are the words written by a man who was drawn into the darkness of emotions. Specifically, allowed us for many years to confront our fear of death and life itself. Even though individuals can respond differently to the same piece of literature, it goes to show that gothic literature and elements of the gothic have made their way into mainstream writing. Edgar Allan Poe of the author…

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    In the short story “The Fall Of The House Of Usher” the author sets the scene for the reader. The author sets a dark and depressing scene for the reader. The choice of words used by the author made the reader feel like the narrator was going to a place that itself was dark and desolate. The first impressions the narrator had seen does characterize the rest of the story. The story was dark and depressing. The author uses multiple elements used to set the scene in the opening passage in the rest…

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    “The Landlady” uses many techniques that identify it under the horror genre; such as imagery, foreshadowing, mood/tone, theme, plot/setting, and suspense. Roald Dahl uses imagery in this short story by vividly describing the events that occur. On page one, line 8, the author states, “But the air was deadly cold…” As a reader you can imagine the wind blowing onto your face, and feeling the bitterness, and the chill of the wind on a dark night. Page three, lines 261-263, show the comfort of the…

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