The Cambridge Companion to World-Gothic Literature
Author(s): Edited by Rebecca Duncan, Rebekah Cumpsty
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Monsters have always swarmed around the frontiers of colonialism and capitalism, from Europe's invasion and occupation of the Americas to the planetary emergency of the present day. In this volume, we discover how the early British Gothic – far from a progenitor – is in fact a belated cultural response to capitalist modernity, one anticipated by myriad spectres haunting the plantations of the 'New World'. Gothic did not begin in Britain, and then become global over time. Rather, as the volume reveals, gothic has always been world-gothic: a way of dealing with the alienation and anxiety that erupt with capitalist modernisation, when- and wherever this is taking place. Essays in the volume chart the new links and comparisons enabled by this insight, renovating established gothic concepts and outlining groundbreaking new theoretical infrastructure. Together, chapters provincialise the 'western' gothic tradition, in order to open up new possibilities for world-gothic reading.
- Upends Gothic's Eurocentric origin story by redefining the 'original' gothic as a belated response to capitalist modernity – one that is anticipated by the spectres haunting the plantations of the 'New World'.
- Centres world-gothic culture in the history of the unfolding planetary emergency, showing that monsters have always appeared in the wake of colonial and capitalist socio-ecological destruction, through the eras of enslavement and colonialism and into the present
- Outlines and demonstrates a range of new theoretical, critical and comparative frameworks, which update existing transregional approaches to the gothic and open up the field of gothic studies to previously unconsidered cultural texts, regions and periods
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