Gothic Literature
In this course, we explore the history of the Gothic novel, beginning with Horace Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto, and finishing with the literature (and films) of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries that have been influenced by the Gothic, including Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca and Angela Carter’s A Bloody Chamber. Along the way, we will explore some of the most important novels in the English language, including: Frankenstein, Wuthering Heights, Jane Eyre, Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde, and the Picture of Dorian Gray.
 
What this playlist includes:
44 lectures across 4 courses.
All resources designed and delivered by university academics and researchers.
Courses and Lectures
1. Gothic Literature
Prof. John McRae
Nottingham University
1.3. The First Gothic Novels – 05:58
1.4. Early Gothic Literature – 06:33
1.5. The End of Early Gothic – 06:15
1.7. Frankenstein – 20:51
1.8. Early Victorian Gothic – 06:56
1.9. Wuthering Heights – 14:12
1.10. Jane Eyre – 15:21
1.11. Late Victorian Gothic – 11:03
1.12. Psychological Gothic – 04:19
1.13. Fin de Siecle – 10:29
1.14. Modern Gothic – 05:12
2. Gothic Literature
Dr Elly McCausland
York University
3. Gothic Literature and Race
Dr Maisha Wester
Sheffield University
4. Genre in Literature – The Female Gothic
Dr Neil Cocks
Reading University
4.1. Genre – 07:02
4.2. Plot and Genre – 06:08
4.3. Motif and Genre – 05:58
4.6. Colonialism and Genre – 04:15
4.7. Atypical Aspects of Genre – 09:26
What Next?