Irish Gothic literature developed in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Most of the writers were Anglo-Irish. The period from 1691 to 1800 was marked by the dominance of the Protestant Ascendancy, Anglo-Irish families of the Church of Ireland who controlled most of the land. The Irish Parliament, which was almost exclusively Protestant in composition, passed the Penal Laws, effectively disenfranchising the Catholic majority both politically and economically. This began to change with the Acts of Union 1800 and the concomitant abolition of the Irish Parliament. Following a vigorous campaign led by Irish lawyer Daniel O'Connell, Westminster passed the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 removing most of the disabilities imposed upon Catholics.
The Anglo-Irish community found itself in a liminal position. No longer able to rely on the British government to protect their interests, many leaned toward Irish nationalism, which itself was somewhat problematic given their minority status. This anxiety found voice in their literature.
The Irish Gothic novel developed in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, a period when the Anglo-Irish community found themselves viewed as neither sufficiently English by the English, nor sufficiently Irish by their Catholic countrymen. The Irish Gothic novel reflects an Irish Anglican response to historical conditions, [1] and allegorized the concerns of a minority population who (rightly or wrongly) perceived themselves under threat from the native Catholics over whom they maintained a precarious control. [2] The exercising or exorcising of repressed anxiety is a characteristic function of Gothic fiction. [3] "Irish writers often turned to the Gothic for images and narratives which would enable them to find new ways of articulating a stable identity in the midst of tremendous change." [4]
Early Irish Gothic fiction tended to present Catholics as the strange, if not diabolical Other. Later writers such as Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu explored postcolonial concerns regarding his own class by depicting them simultaneously as the causers of and sufferers from their own colonial misdeeds. [5] This idea was broached by Irish Anglican priest Thomas Leland in his 1773 philosophical History of Ireland from the Invasion of Henry II, which was criticized by both Anglicans and Catholics.
Among the characteristics of Gothic literature are: gloomy settings, ruined castles, suspense, [2] a past that will not stay in the past, [6] and "the fires of lust ignited to precipitous extremes of peril". [7]
Regina Maria Roche (née Dalton) (1764–1845) was born in Waterford and lived in Dublin before moving to England after her marriage. Her 1798 Gothic novel Clermont "...is arguably the definitive text of the Gothic novel craze during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries". [8] A bestselling author in her own day, her reputation was later overshadowed by that of Ann Radcliffe, to whom she is often compared. While there are many similarities in their work, Roche takes her heroine out of the safe haven of an idyllic natural setting and sends her to the city. [8]
Charles Maturin (1780 – 1824) was a curate of the Church of Ireland. [9] His first three works were Gothic novels. He is best known for the novel Melmoth the Wanderer , which Devendra Varma described as "the crowning achievement of the Gothic Romance". [10]
Sheridan Le Fanu (1814 – 1873) was a leading writer of ghost stories in the Victorian era. The son of a Dean of the Church of Ireland, as a teenager he experienced first-hand the disturbances of the Tithe War, [11] a protest against the policy of enforcing tithes on the Roman Catholic majority for the upkeep of the Church of Ireland.
A meticulous craftsman, he turned Gothic's focus on external sources of horror to a combination of "psychological insight and supernatural terror". [12] He specialised in tone rather than "shock effects" and often left important details unexplained and mysterious. The 1864 novel Uncle Silas "plays nostalgic variations on the themes of Ann Radcliffe and Charlotte Brontë as an innocent heroine is imperiled in the old dark house of her charismatic reprobate guardian, an uncle with designs on her inheritance". [13]
Bram Stoker (1847 – 1912) was born on the northside of Dublin in "Black '47, the worst year of the Great Famine. He would later attribute his prolonged childhood illness to widespread contagion following the Famine. [14] He became the theatre critic for the Dublin Evening Mail, which was co-owned by Sheridan Le Fanu. Le Fanu's 1872 Carmilla was an important influence on Stoker's Dracula . [15] Stoker later became the personal assistant of actor Sir Henry Irving and business manager of London's Lyceum Theatre, which Irving owned.
Elizabeth Miller said that Dracula successfully combined folklore, legend, vampire fiction and the conventions of the Gothic novel. [16] The ship that brought Dracula to Whitby with only the dead captain left, hands bound to the wheel, echoes the "Coffin ships" of the Famine era. The Land War of the early 1880s resonates with the Count traveling with coffins containing his native soil. [14]
Stephen Arata sees the novel's cultural context as reflecting a "growing domestic unease" over the morality of imperial colonisation. [17] Several critics have described Count Dracula in the context of an Anglo-Irish landlord, [18] [19] sucking the resources from the land. [14]
Oscar Wilde (1854 – 1900) was born on the southside of Dublin. He was the grand-nephew (by marriage) of Charles Maturin. [20] His parents, Anglo-Irish intellectuals, often hosted salons at their home. Among those who attended were antiquary George Petrie, poet Samuel Ferguson and Sheridan Le Fanu. [21] The Picture of Dorian Gray was Wilde's only novel. Published in 1890, Robert McCrum describes it as "an arresting, and slightly camp, exercise in late-Victorian gothic". [22] The character Lord Henry Wotton serves as Mephistopheles. [23]
Gerald Griffin was born in Limerick. His father was a farmer who assisted the peasantry in the repression that followed the Irish Rebellion of 1798. [3] At the age of nineteen, Gerald moved to London hoping to become a playwright, but ended up working in a publishing house. In 1827, he published Holland-Tide; or, Munster Popular Tales, a collection of seven short stories which was well received.[ citation needed ] In The Brown Man, the beautiful but poor Nora marries a strange man who is not what he purports to be. The Brown Man draws on both folklore and Gothic tropes. While Griffin's story may symbolize the oppression of Ireland by an exploitative, alien aristocratic class, Irish critic Sinéad Sturgeon suggests that it "...is equally suggestive of the interiorized Gothic landscape of a writer haunted by recurring worries of originality, plagiarism, and the inevitability of belatedness. [3]
James Clarence Mangan was a poet born in Dublin.
William Carleton was a novelist born in County Tyrone.
Abraham "Bram" Stoker was an Irish author who is best known for writing the 1897 Gothic horror novel Dracula. During his lifetime, he was better known as the personal assistant of actor Sir Henry Irving and business manager of the West End's Lyceum Theatre, which Irving owned.
Carmilla is an 1872 Gothic novella by Irish author Sheridan Le Fanu and one of the early works of vampire fiction, predating Bram Stoker's Dracula (1897) by 25 years. First published as a serial in The Dark Blue (1871–72), the story is narrated by a young woman preyed upon by a female vampire named Carmilla, later revealed to be Countess Mircalla Karnstein. The lead character is the original prototypical example of the lesbian vampire, expressing romantic desires toward the protagonist. The story is often anthologised, and has been adapted many times in films, movies and other media.
Dracula is a 1897 Gothic horror novel by Irish author Bram Stoker. An epistolary novel, the narrative is related through letters, diary entries, and newspaper articles. It has no single protagonist and opens with solicitor Jonathan Harker taking a business trip to stay at the castle of a Transylvanian nobleman, Count Dracula. Harker escapes the castle after discovering that Dracula is a vampire, and the Count moves to England and plagues the seaside town of Whitby. A small group, led by Abraham Van Helsing, investigate, hunt, and kill Dracula.
Gothic fiction, sometimes called Gothic horror, is a loose literary aesthetic of fear and haunting. The name refers to Gothic architecture of the European Middle Ages, which was characteristic of the settings of early Gothic novels.
Horror is a genre of speculative fiction that is intended to disturb, frighten, or scare. Horror is often divided into the sub-genres of psychological horror and supernatural horror, which are in the realm of speculative fiction. Literary historian J. A. Cuddon, in 1984, defined the horror story as "a piece of fiction in prose of variable length ... which shocks, or even frightens the reader, or perhaps induces a feeling of repulsion or loathing". Horror intends to create an eerie and frightening atmosphere for the reader. Often the central menace of a work of horror fiction can be interpreted as a metaphor for larger fears of a society.
Joseph Thomas Sheridan Le Fanu was an Irish writer of Gothic tales, mystery novels, and horror fiction. He was a leading ghost story writer of his time, central to the development of the genre in the Victorian era. M. R. James described Le Fanu as "absolutely in the first rank as a writer of ghost stories". Three of his best-known works are the locked-room mystery Uncle Silas, the vampire novella Carmilla, and the historical novel The House by the Churchyard.
Vampire literature covers the spectrum of literary work concerned principally with the subject of vampires. The literary vampire first appeared in 18th-century poetry, before becoming one of the stock figures of gothic fiction with the publication of Polidori's The Vampyre (1819), inspired by a story told to him by Lord Byron. Later influential works include the penny dreadful Varney the Vampire (1847); Sheridan Le Fanu's tale of a lesbian vampire, Carmilla (1872), and the most well known: Bram Stoker's Dracula (1897). Some authors created a more "sympathetic vampire", with Varney being the first, and more recent examples such as Moto Hagio's series The Poe Clan (1972–1976) and Anne Rice's novel Interview with the Vampire (1976) proving influential.
The first Irish prose fiction, in the form of legendary stories, appeared in the Irish language as early as the seventh century, along with chronicles and lives of saints in Irish and Latin. Such fiction was an adaptation and elaboration of earlier oral material and was the work of a learned class who had acquired literacy with the coming of Latin Christianity. A number of these stories were still available in manuscripts of the Late Middle Ages and even as late as the nineteenth century, though poetry was by that time the main literary vehicle of the Irish language.
Charles Robert Maturin, also known as C. R. Maturin, was an Irish Protestant clergyman and a writer of Gothic plays and novels. His best known work is the novel Melmoth the Wanderer, published in 1820.
The Jewel of Seven Stars is a horror novel by Irish writer Bram Stoker, first published by Heinemann in 1903. The story is a first-person narrative of a young man pulled into an archaeologist's plot to revive Queen Tera, an ancient Egyptian mummy. It explores common fin de siècle themes such as imperialism, the rise of the New Woman and feminism, and societal progress.
Vampire films have been a staple in world cinema since the era of silent films, so much so that the depiction of vampires in popular culture is strongly based upon their depiction in films throughout the years. The most popular cinematic adaptation of vampire fiction has been from Bram Stoker's 1897 novel Dracula, with over 170 versions to date. Running a distant second are adaptations of the 1872 novel Carmilla by Sheridan Le Fanu. By 2005, the Dracula character had been the subject of more films than any other fictional character except Sherlock Holmes.
Gary William Crawford was an American writer and small press publisher.
LGBTQ themes in horror fiction refers to sexuality in horror fiction that can often focus on LGBTQ+ characters and themes within various forms of media. It may deal with characters who are coded as or who are openly LGBTQ+, or it may deal with themes or plots that are specific to gender and sexual minorities.
Florence Balcombe was the wife and literary executor of Bram Stoker. She is remembered for her legal dispute with the makers of Nosferatu, an unauthorized film based on her husband's novel Dracula.
In a Glass Darkly is a collection of five stories by Sheridan Le Fanu, first published in 1872, the year before his death. The second and third stories are revised versions of previously published stories. The first three stories are short stories, and the fourth and fifth are long enough to be called novellas.
Thomas Leland (1722–1785) was an Irish Anglican priest, a historian, translator and academic and the author of the early gothic novel Longsword, Earl of Salisbury: An Historical Romance, published in 1762. Longsword is set in Gascony and in England, during the reign of Henry III of England.
Urban Gothic is a sub-genre of Gothic fiction, film horror, and television dealing with industrial and post-industrial urban society. It was pioneered in the mid-19th century in Britain, Ireland, and the United States, before being developed in British novels such as Robert Louis Stevenson's Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886) and Irish novels such as Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray (1890) and Bram Stoker's Dracula (1897). In the twentieth century, urban Gothic influenced the creation of the sub-genres of Southern Gothic and suburban Gothic. From the 1980s, interest in the urban Gothic was revived with books like Anne Rice's Vampire Chronicles and a number of graphic novels that drew on dark city landscapes, leading to adaptations in film including Batman (1989), The Crow (1994) and From Hell (2001), as well as influencing films like Seven (1995).
Swan River Press is an independent Irish publishing company dedicated to gothic, supernatural, and fantastic literature. It was founded in Rathmines, Dublin in October 2003 by Brian J. Showers. Swan River publishes contemporary fiction from around the world with an emphasis on Ireland's past and present contributions to the genre. They also issue the non-fiction journal The Green Book: Writings on Irish Gothic, Supernatural and Fantastic Literature, and sporadically organise the Dublin Ghost Story Festival.
The Blood of the Vampire is a Gothic novel by Florence Marryat, published in 1897. The protagonist, Harriet Brandt, is a mixed-race psychic vampire who kills unintentionally. The novel follows Harriet after she leaves a Jamaican convent for Europe, and her ill-fated attempts to integrate with Victorian society.
Charlotte Matilda Blake Thornley Stoker (1818–1901) was an Irish writer, activist and the mother of Bram Stoker. Stoker used some of the stories she told him in his literature.