The Woman In Black Gothic Elements Essay

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The language used in a novel creates the tone and mood for the audience to grasp what the writer solely wants to achieve. The Lexical choices of the writer configure critics to establish a range of motifs and thematic presentations that are evident in the book. A conventional Gothic Literature book establishes the typical Gothic architecture type creating a sinister and eerie atmosphere, which also combines with the supernatural creating the classical Gothic Literature five key books. However, what is most interesting is that most contemporary novels, especially Jane Eyre and Rebecca, have such clear comparisons with their Gothic elements. Whereas, with the contemporary novel of The woman in Black, the idea of the supernatural is evidently …show more content…

It was a fine autumn morning; the early sun shone serenely on embrowned groves and still green fields; advancing on to the lawn, I looked up and surveyed the front of the mansion. It was three storeys high, of proportions not vast, though considerable: a gentleman’s manor-house, not a nobleman’s seat: battlements round the top gave it a picturesque look. Its grey front stood out well from the background of a rookery..."

This is specifically evident here as Bronte focuses on the personification of the door opening having the effect that some supernatural entity acknowledges her presence and she acknowledges its presence. Alongside this, Bronte connects two contrasting things to create the realization that this ‘entity’ is present during the day and at the night. However, what is interesting is that Bronte moves away from extending the ‘weird’ experience, instead she focuses on the ‘groves’ and ‘green fields’ making the reader movie quickly away from a sensation that is eerie to a sensation that is warm and …show more content…

The idea that Manderly is located near the seas demonstrates its luxurious and swell setting. However, the most infamous line ‘last night I dreamt of Manderly’ is embedded in our heads as it demonstrates the fact that Manderly had changed her from the innocent girl to lavish, upper-class woman, and of course the idea of Maxim killing his wife and the mysterious Mrs Danvers contributes to the reader and Rebecca to feel psychologically impacted by the big house in Manderly and its

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