The haunted wilderness as the Sublime in Canadian Gothic fiction in the 19th century The haunted wilderness as the Sublime in Canadian Gothic fiction in the 19th century

The haunted wilderness as the Sublime in Canadian Gothic fiction in the 19th century

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    • USD 23.99

Publisher Description

This work focuses on the question how and why nature can be seen as the Sublime in
Canadian Gothic fiction of the 19th century. This will be shown on the poem “Death in the
Arctic” by Robert W. Service. A short summary will be given at the beginning and will be
followed by a sketchy interpretation. The concept of the Sublime in Gothic fiction in general
will be explained briefly. The next paragraph will deal with general Gothic elements that
appear in Canadian Gothic fiction and that all together form the basis for the statement that
nature is the source for the Sublime.
A detailed analysis of the primary source will be given in the then-following section,
showing how the Sublime is created in this particular piece, using the elements that were
stated in the previous section.
At the end, a conclusion will be drawn.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2009
4 September
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
14
Pages
PUBLISHER
GRIN Verlag
SELLER
Open Publishing GmbH
SIZE
143
KB
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