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    Page 8 of 17 - About 167 Essays
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    The Fall of the House of Usher is a short story made by the famous author, Edgar Allan Poe. It's a horror story with romantic elements. Not romantic as in love and emotions, it's an example of Romanticism. Although is worth mentioning that Poe indeed was able to write romantic stories with love and all, though he's more popular for making horror and terrified the reader getting inside their head. What is Romanticism? At its core Romanticism was an artistic, literary, musical and intellectual…

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    One of the major writers during Romanticism that significantly employs the element of the terrible in his writing is Edgar Allan Poe. Behind the impact that it has on readers’ minds Poe is utterly mindful about the phenomena present in the human mind. Accordingly, he concentrates on this fact rather that in the traditions of the Gothic practices of Romanticism’s times which allowed him a vast work on the genuine foundation of terror (Lovecraft, 1927). In this sense, Poe’s objective in doing so…

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    James Fenimore Cooper’s, The Last of the Mohicans, is undoubtedly very violent and dark in its nature but underneath all the action lies a deeper meaning. Both articles, “Narrative Structure and Historical process in the Last of the Mohicans,” and, “The Last of the Mohicans and the Sounds of Discord,” are helpful in addressing the gothic stylistic ties within the novel, but differ on their main thesis. The article regarding narrative and historical process focuses more on the initial formation…

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    The novel is written in a dark, melancholic, and nightmarish mood, having a “black-and-white” air. It is written with an austere style of a monotonous-sounding prose. Overall, the environment is implied as dreary-looking, as seen from Winston’s eyes. As a matter of fact, the plot setting is simply a fictitious version of mid-1950’s geopolitical map. Just as the actual history saw three spheres of influence dominate the world, namely the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), which was the…

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    ¨ True!-nervous-very, very dreadfully nervous I had been and am! But why will you say that I am mad? ¨ This quote, taken from the story ¨ The Tell-Tale Heart ¨, by Edgar Allan Poe shows a mood of confusion and disbelief because he saying he is not crazy too but he sounds crazy. In the story ¨ The Tell-Tale Heart ¨, a man is asking why they think he is crazy, he had killed a man, he had nothing against him. It was only because the old man had a vulture eye and he hated it. Every night he watched…

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    George R.R Martin, an American novelist, once said, “Love is madness and lust is poison.” Yet, the loss of the same love can oftentimes leave people in a state of anguish. In the poem “The Raven” by Edgar Allan Poe, the protagonist is trapped in melancholia after the loss of his wife Lenore. The author uses two gothic conventions; decay and emotion to manifest the main character’s madness driven by grief. The gothic convention of decay demonstrated how sorrow prompted the protagonists’ madness…

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    The House Says It All In Edgar Allan Poe’s short story “The Fall of the House of Usher,” a powerful atmosphere is created. Although set on a simple, “dull, dark, and soundless day in the autumn of the year” (Poe 420), there is a sense of deterioration, insanity, and even murder portrayed in this short story. The Usher mansion is carefully crafted to heighten the mood and atmosphere of the story. A great deal of time is spent specifically embodying the setting. Poe brilliantly illustrates,…

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    The Farmhouse In The Dogs

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    The “farmhouse” is a crucial setting to my book “The Dogs”. Dark, isolated, dingy, and a discreet place in a small town called Wolf Hollow. One of the main reasons this house qualified for their stay was because it was in a quiet neighbourhood and in midst of a dense cornfield making it hardly visible to transient passerby. Of course, an ideal hideout for a woman who doesn’t want a speculative audience and in particular wants to steer clear of her abusive and promiscuous husband’s company. The…

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    One common characteristic of Romanticism is the importance of the initiative and emotional and rejection of the rational and intellectual. Such is the case in “Usher.” Those who are skeptical in Poe’s Romantic influences would use this aspect of Romanticism to claim that he is not a Romantic because throughout the story the narrator attempts to explain the unexplainable with the rational. An example of this is when the narrator attributes an “iciness, a sinking, a sinking, a sickening of the…

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    Writing to Compare, page 48 Both Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Fall of the House of Usher” and Julio Cortazar’s “House Taken Over” have similar settings because they both take place in spooky large houses. However, in Poe’s story, “The Fall of the House of Usher,” the setting is different because nobody likes that house. By contrast, Cortazar’s “House Taken Over,” everyone likes the house. Gothic Literature is when a story has a bleak setting, tortured characters, strange or violent plot, or a gloomy…

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