"Since the First World War Americans have been leading a double life, and our history has moved on two rivers, one visible, the other underground; there has been the history of politics which is concrete, factual, practical and unbelievably dull; and there is a subterranean river of untapped, ferocious, lonely and romantic desires, that concentration of ecstasy and violence which is the dream life of the nation."
Norman Mailer
Norman Mailer
"The whole work of healing Tellus depends on nursing that little spark, on incarnating that ghost, which is still alive in every people, and different in each. When Logres really dominates Britain, when the goddess Reason, the divine clearness, is really enthroned in France, when the order of Heaven is really followed in China--why then it will be spring."
"This new history of yours," said McPhee, "is a wee bit lacking in documents."
C.S. Lewis
"This new history of yours," said McPhee, "is a wee bit lacking in documents."
C.S. Lewis
Synchronicities this week
- June 24 Midsummer/St. John’s Day
- June 24, 1947 The first flying saucers are sighted over Mount Rainier by pilot Ken Arnold.
- June 24, 1542 St. John of the Cross, Spanish Carmelite mystic and poet, is born.
- June 24, 1938 500 ton meteorite lands near Pittsburgh Pennsylvania.
- June 24, 1717 First Free Masons' grand lodge founded in London.
- June 24, 1374 A sudden outbreak of St. John's Dance causes people in the streets of Aachen, Germany, to experience hallucinations and begin to jump and twitch uncontrollably until they collapse from exhaustion.
- June 24, 1314 Battle of Bannockburn; Scotland regains independence from England.
- June 24, 843 Vikings destroy Nantes.
- June 23 Midsummer’s Eve
- June 23, 1972 Nixon & Haldeman agree to use CIA to cover up Watergate.
- June 23, 1942 Germany's latest fighter, a Focke-Wulf FW190 is captured intact when it mistakenly lands at RAF Pembrey in Wales.
- June 23, 1888 Frederick Douglass is 1st African-American nominated for president.
- June 23, 1848 Workers’ insurrection in Paris.
- June 23, 1713 The French residents of Acadia are given one year to declare allegiance to Britain or leave Nova Scotia, Canada. They choose the latter, migrate to Louisiana, and become Cajuns.
- June 21 Summer Solstice (11:28 a.m.).
- June 21, 1964 Three civil rights workers-Michael H. Schwerner, Andrew Goodman, and James E. Chaney-are kidnapped and murdered by the Klan in Mississippi .
- June 21, 1948 The 33 1/3 RPM LP record is introduced by Columbia Records.
- June 21, 1944 Ray Davies of the Kinks born in London.
- June 21, 1916 Mexican troops beat US expeditionary force under Gen Pershing.
- June 21, 1877 The Molly Maguires, ten Irish immigrant labor activists, are hanged in Pennsylvania prisons.
- June 20, 1947 Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel, gangster, the “man who invented Las Vegas,” shot dead in Beverly Hills, Cal.
- June 20, 1909 Errol Flynn, greatest of the swashbucklers, born in Hobart, Tasmania.
- June 20, 1944 Congress charters Central Intelligence Agency.
- June 20, 1943 Detroit race riot kills 35.
- June 20, 1893 - Lizzie Borden acquitted in murder of parents in New Bedford Mass.
- June 20, 1871 Ku Klux Klan trials began in federal court in Oxford Miss.
- June 20, 1837 Queen Victoria at 18 ascends British throne ; rules for 63 years ending in 1901.
- June 20, 1756 146 British soldiers imprisoned in the "Black Hole of Calcutta." Most die.
- June 20, 1631 The Irish village of Baltimore is attacked by Algerian pirates.
- June 20, 1214 The University of Oxford receives its charter.
- June 20, 451 Germans & Romans beat Attila the Hun at Catalarinische Fields.
Sunday, October 18, 2009
This Week in the Secret History: The Gothic Novel Alters Western Consciousness
Gothic fiction (sometimes referred to as Gothic horror) is a genre of literature that combines elements of both horror and romance. As a genre, it is generally believed to have been invented by the English author Horace Walpole, with his 1764 novel The Castle of Otranto.
Prominent features of Gothic fiction include terror (both psychological and physical), mystery, the supernatural, ghosts, haunted houses and Gothic architecture, castles, darkness, death, decay, doubles, madness, secrets, and hereditary curses.
The stock characters of Gothic fiction include tyrants, villains, bandits, maniacs, Byronic heroes, persecuted maidens, femmes fatales, madwomen, magicians, vampires, werewolves, monsters, demons, angels, fallen angels, the beauty and the beast, revenants, ghosts, perambulating skeletons, and the Wandering Jew.
The effect of Gothic fiction feeds on a pleasing sort of terror, an extension of Romantic literary pleasures that were relatively new at the time of Walpole's novel. Melodrama and parody (including self-parody) were other long-standing features of the Gothic initiated by Walpole. Gothic literature is intimately associated with the Gothic Revival architecture of the same era. In a way similar to the gothic revivalists' rejection of the clarity and rationalism of the neoclassical style of the Enlightened Establishment, the literary Gothic embodies an appreciation of the joys of extreme emotion, the thrills of fearfulness and awe inherent in the sublime, and a quest for atmosphere. The ruins of gothic buildings gave rise to multiple linked emotions by representing the inevitable decay and collapse of human creations—thus the urge to add fake ruins as eyecatchers in English landscape parks. English Gothic writers often associated medieval buildings with what they saw as a dark and terrifying period, characterized by harsh laws enforced by torture, and with mysterious, fantastic, and superstitious rituals.
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