Terror and Wonder: The Gothic Imagination

Fascinating exhibition at the British Library looking at the history of Gothic fiction.

It started with the Castle of Otranto and looked at the life and work of its author Horace Walpole. I loved seeing a reliquary of Thomas Beckett he owned shown with a letter by Henry Cole describing it. It then looked at the growth in the genre and showed an early copy of Northanger Abbey with the seven ‘horrid novels’ mentioned in the book.

It then looked at the Romantic period including the events leading up to the publication of Frankenstein and The Vampyre. Next came the Victorian era with works by Wilkie Collins but it also included Dickens on the premise that Gothic fiction moved into the ‘modern world’ of slums and poverty rather than an imagined past.

Cinema was well covered both from the point of view of films of these early books but also as a medium in its own right for telling gothic tales. All the classics were covering including works like The Birds. Modern gothic was looked at via graphic novels and there was  lovely feature on the twice yearly gothic weekends in Whitby.

I wish I had more time to do this show as there was so much detail and it was all much more interesting than I’d expected!

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