Five Short Stories of Edgar Allan Poe

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Barnabás Kanik

Five short stories of Edgar Allan Poe

Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1849) pioneered many of the most enduring forms of American popular culture, including detective story and the Gothic or sensational tale. I will compare and contrast five short stories of Poe: The Gold-Bug, The Purloined Letter, “Thou Art the Man”, The Cask of Amontillado and The Pit and the Pendulum. The genre, the purpose and role of the narrator and the parallelism between all of the stories will be examined.

The five stories can be split up into two groups by their genre: detective story and gothic horror. The detective stories are The Gold-Bug, The Purloined Letter and “Thou Art the Man”; while the Gothic horrors are The Cask of Amontillado and The Pit and the Pendulum.

Poe gave birth to the detective stories we know today, still, before his works, there were detectives in literature, but no detection (there were investigators of crime in Lytton’s and Godwin’s works too, but not in the same meaning as Poe’s detective). Poe, instead of calling his writings detective stories, uses the term “tales of ratiocination”. According to the classical rules of detective fiction, three indispensable elements are necessary for success: the mystery, the detective and the solution/revelation. All these three can be found in his works. The Gold-Bug lacks the crime element, but still can be called a detective story because of the way of finding the pirate treasure, like the solving of a puzzle. Poe says detecting a crime is similar to a puzzle, because there is only one correct and perfect solution, which resembles a cryptogram. A cryptogram loses its interest when it has been solved. The detective characters are an image of Poe himself and all of them sh...

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... and other treasures, or escaping an immense pendulum with the help of hungry rats. The other similarity I noticed is the writing style of Poe. He holds back information in all the stories, we do not know from who was the letter stolen or why Montresor vowed revenge on Fortunato, nor why the names prisoner was sentenced to death by the Inquisition.

Edgar Allan Poe opened up many new ways in literature for the following generations, without him we probably would not have detective stories and Gothic tales in the same form as we have today.

Bibliography:

1. Bollobás Enikő. AZ AMERIKAI IRODALOM TÖRTÉNETE 2005

2. Buranelli, Vincent. Edgar Allan Poe 1961

3. Lauter, Paul. The Heath Anthology of American Literature Fifth Edition Volume B Early Nineteenth Century: 1800-1865 2006

4. Symons, Julian. THE TELL-TALE HEART The Life and Works of Edgar Allan Poe 1978

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