The Goths, as recounted by a Gothic historian named Jordanes (mid 6th Century AD), were a Teutonic-Germanic people whose original homeland was, according to Jordanes, in southern Sweden. At that time, this half-barbaric band was ruled by a king called Berig. It was King Berig who led his people south to the shores of the Baltic Sea, where they split up into two groups: the Ostrogoths (or Eastern Goths), and the Visigoths (Western Goths).
According to Jordanes, the Goths reached the pinnacle of their power around the 5th Century AD, when they conquered Rome and most of Spain.
The original Goths — and this is important — have no real connection with what that word eventually came to mean.
It was many centuries later, you see, that a certain non-classical style of architecture emerged. Because this style of architecture wasn’t classical, it was pejoratively termed Gothic, which meant “barbaric.”
Gothic literature came about centuries after this and is so called because a great number of these novels are set in Gothic monasteries and Gothic Abbeys.
That is how the genre of Gothic literature came to be.
Setting is the crucial component to Gothic fiction. As Ann Blaisde Tracy wrote in her 1981 book The Gothic Novel, this literature depicts “a fallen world,” a world of ruin and desuetude, dilapidation and disrepair, death, decay — a vital and thriving world no more.
The English author Horace Walpole is generally credited with writing the first Gothic novel, and that novel, written in 1764, is called The Castle of Otranto.
Though she didn’t originate Gothic literate, the enigmatic Anne Radcliffe (1764 – 1823) is undoubtedly that genre’s greatest early popularizer, and her Gothic novel The Mysteries of Udolopho was immediately parodied by the likes of Jane Austin and Thomas Love Peacock, among others.
The early Gothic novels are, however, diffuse and stylistically difficult to our modern-day eyes and ears, the pace often bogging down in its baroque prose. Among the best of the early Gothic novels ever written is Melmoth The Wanderer, by Charles Robert Maturin (which Victor Hugo and Lord Byron also loved).
Yet for all its difficulty now, Gothic literature employed wildly intriguing plot devices which at the time were quite new — secret closets, mysterious manuscripts, ghostly abbeys, unspeakable deeds — so that at it’s best, there is an undeniable sense of strangeness and fascination that pervades Gothic literature. That is the reason some of the world’s greatest writers have used Gothic literature as a model for their own non-Gothic novels.
Happy Halloween.

October 31st, 2011 at 8:46 pm
Very nice – Love the post! The connection between Gothic literature and architecture can be found in the sensational angles and tresses that link between the walls, as seen in the picture below:
http://rds.yahoo.com/_ylt=A0PDoS68Wq9O.T8AljOjzbkF;_ylu=X3oDMTBpcGszamw0BHNlYwNmcC1pbWcEc2xrA2ltZw–/SIG=122lk8vut/EXP=1320143676/**http%3a//www.1adventure.com/archives/000205.html
It’s all very melodramatic.
The literature allows for the reader to venture out of the reality of life and experience twists and turns that can take the reader to the edge of rapture. It applies two of the most innate feelings to humans: sexuality and violence.
It is true the term Gothic was transferable with the term barbaric early on, but as can be seen through the latest definition of Gothic, it is the abstract; the creative. Even the term Goth, as applied to a cultural sect, has taken on a sense of strange or fear from the rest of the society. It can then be treated as a ‘witch hunt’ that is conducted purely on the basis that it isn’t rational or accepted within the common fold of the community. As if there can ever be rationale within the forbidden…
Trick-or-Treat!
November 6th, 2011 at 4:28 am
I’ll bet half the teeny boppers with their trench coats and bad mascara have no idea what you’re talking about anymore than when they idolize Morrisey or invoke Hitler to the same level as Ozzie eating a bats face off.
Happy Halloweeenee, heres some Foamy
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yn2nULhgmXw
November 6th, 2011 at 1:31 pm
Thank you, Micky. Hope you had a great Hawaiian Halloweenee.