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4 ‘Mad, Bad and Dangerous to Know’

The Romantics and the Gothic Imagination
  • John Robb
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The art of darkness
This chapter is in the book The art of darkness

Abstract

In a Europe that was full of fear, Gothic horror became its own genre. The Romantic Era encouraged the expression of emotions through art, resulting in its own century-long artistic revolution. Romantics like John Keats and William Blake led the sort of thinking that sparked the pre-industrial revolution, critiquing child labour and the destruction of nature. Other poets began to introduce elements of horror into their work. This chapter explores the gothic connection between poems, history and horror.

Abstract

In a Europe that was full of fear, Gothic horror became its own genre. The Romantic Era encouraged the expression of emotions through art, resulting in its own century-long artistic revolution. Romantics like John Keats and William Blake led the sort of thinking that sparked the pre-industrial revolution, critiquing child labour and the destruction of nature. Other poets began to introduce elements of horror into their work. This chapter explores the gothic connection between poems, history and horror.

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