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Characteristics of Poe’s Writing
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“Gothic” setting from name of architectural style of late Middle Ages) in literature, term applied to writings that reproduce mysterious atmosphere of medieval castles with dungeons and secret passages plus a bit of the bizarre and supernatural
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Romanticism moved from real world to world of imagination—Poe’s was a focus on chaos and possibility of evil (not creative source of dreams/visions)
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Single Effect (psychological effect)—must appreciate his use of ambiguity and atmosphere—he leaves tangible, rational world (sunlight) and searches for truth in ambiguous, irrational world within the human mind (darkness)
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Motif —(repeated use of image or symbol)—death of a beautiful woman and premature burial
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Point of View unreliable first-person narrator
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Imagery images of horror, darkness to create atmosphere of gloom—mood of despair
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Allegory/Symbolism narrative in which characters or objects symbolize something outside the narrative— yet Poe said, as a critic, he despised it because detracted from the “effect”
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“The Masque of the Red Death”
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MASQUE masked ball 14 th to 15 th c. Europe; mask that covers whole face
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BLACK DEATH bubonic plague epidemic killed 50-75% of Europe’s population in 14 th c.—lasted 20+ years and was spread by fleas (on rats and humans)—problems about lack of sanitation (trash and chamber pots dumped in street)
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Some critics claim the source of this story was a news article about a masked ball held in Paris in 1832—while the city was devastated by a cholera epidemic
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ALLEGORY Poe’s story not intended to be realistic; imaginative atmosphere to be read as allegory (characters, objects, events symbolize ideas/qualities); the mysterious guest not a real person, but the embodiment of the Red Death
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BIBLICAL ALLUSION Poe uses Biblical allusion—prophecy from 1 Thessalonians 5:2—“For yourselves know perfectly that the Day of the Lord so cometh as a thief in the night”—reference to Judgment Day
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“The Fall of the House of Usher” Usher twins—Madeline and Roderick— portrayed as sharing a single soul (two halves of one soul) with Madeline the physical and Roderick the mental
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Characterization They share “sympathies of a scarcely intelligible nature”—as we watch his mental disintegration and her physical decline—and they share the same fate at the end
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“Unreliable” Narrator First-person narrator—seems a detached observer Tells us he “really knew little” of Usher Becomes fascinated with Usher’s declining mental state—in addition to viewing, he becomes a participant in the madness Also, like the readers, the narrator is fascinated by the turmoil of another person
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