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Southern Ontario Gothic

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Southern Ontario Gothic is a subgenre of the Gothic novel genre and a feature of Canadian literature that comes from Southern Ontario. This region includes Toronto, Southern Ontario's major industrial cities (Windsor, London, Hamilton, Kitchener, St. Thomas, Oshawa, St. Catharines), and the surrounding countryside. While the genre may also feature other areas of Ontario, Canada, and the world as narrative locales, this region provides the core settings.

Overview

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The term was first used in Graeme Gibson's Eleven Canadian Novelists (1972) to recognize an existing tendency to apply aspects of the Gothic novel to writing based in and around Southern Ontario.[1] In an interview with Timothy Findley, Gibson commented that Findley's novel The Last of the Crazy People shared similarities with the American Southern Gothic genre, to which Findley replied, "...sure, it's Southern Gothic: Southern Ontario Gothic."[2]

Notable writers of this subgenre include Alice Munro, Margaret Atwood, Robertson Davies, Jane Urquhart, Marian Engel, James Reaney, and Barbara Gowdy.[3]

Characteristics

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Like the Southern Gothic of American writers such as William Faulkner, Flannery O'Connor and Eudora Welty, Southern Ontario Gothic analyzes and critiques social conditions such as race, gender, religion and politics, but within the context of Southern Ontario.[4] Southern Ontario Gothic is generally characterized by a stern realism set against the dour small-town Protestant morality stereotypical of the region, and often has underlying themes of moral hypocrisy.[citation needed] Actions and people that act against humanity, logic, and morality all are portrayed unfavourably, and one or more characters may be suffering from some form of mental illness. In a review of Alice Munro's Dear Life for Quill & Quire, literary critic James Grainger writes that "Violence, illness, and reputations ruined by a single indiscretion are accepted in Munro’s secretive, repressed communities as a kind of levelling mechanism, rough justice for those who dare to strive for something finer."[5] The Gothic novel has traditionally examined the role of evil in the human soul, and has incorporated dark or horrific imagery to create the desired setting.[6] Some (but not all) writers of Southern Ontario Gothic use supernatural or magic realist elements; a few deviate from realism entirely, in the manner of the fantastical gothic novel. Virtually all dwell to a certain extent upon the grotesque.[citation needed]

Often, these elements are combined to highlight themes present in the wider canon of Canadian literature. An overarching sense of displacement either socially, physically or psychologically often sets the stage for supernatural elements, transgressive behavior or inner turmoil.[7] Accompanying displacement is a nightmarish feeling of spiritual imprisonment in a Southern Ontario setting that is characterized by an eroding societal value system and an atmosphere that stifles and fears individual means of expression.[8] Many sources of terror and horror are created when a character tries to break free of the strictures of established norms within these communities.[9] This lends itself to a motif of 'Canadian' survival that is applied to scenarios dependent on enduring abstract horrors which originate from within a character who is often living in a small village, town or city of the region.[10] In a review of Cynthia Sugars' book Canadian Gothic: Literature, History and the Spectre of Self-Invention, Amy Ransom claims that Southern Ontario Gothic seeks to tell the stories of generations of settlers in a way that uses elements of the taboo, the surreal and the fantastical to form a new common identity in a postcolonial world.[11] For example, the family of prolific Southern Ontario Gothic author, Alice Munro, originally settled on Huron lands which were a basis of many of her shorter works.[12] Writer David Ingham, in contrast, critiques Southern Ontario Gothic as having "little or nothing to distinguish it from everyday, garden-variety type realism."[13] Likewise, critics like Gerry Turcotte, Greg Loannou, and Lynne Missen, have questioned the presence of truly gothic supernatural elements in Canadian literature.[14]

Postcolonial perspective

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A key feature of Southern Ontario Gothic is its reckoning with the region’s history of colonization. Often gothic elements like the uncanny, supernatural, and hauntings are used to reinvigorate memories of past traumas that have been covered up with revisionist history.[15] Regional gothic literature, such as Southern Ontario Gothic, makes allusions to specific places through landmarks, architecture, vernacular, etc. This is distinct from other forms of Gothic that are set in arbitrarily chosen places. Because colonization is a necessarily geographic endeavor, this aspect is particularly important to Southern Ontario Gothic which tends to indicate a specific location that has been colonized and is now haunted by the remnants of its past.[15] The conflict between colonial settlers and the Canadian wild is also an important aspect of Southern Ontario Gothic. In the early stories of Canadian Gothic, the decaying abandoned castles of traditional Gothic literature were substituted with the uninhabited Canadian wild.[16] In this setting, white settlers are haunted by the land they have stolen and are in a constant battle to preserve their sense of “civilization” in the wild.[17]

Notable works

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Notable works of the genre include Davies' Deptford Trilogy, Findley's Headhunter, Atwood's Alias Grace and The Blind Assassin, and Munro's Selected Stories.[1]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b The Oxford Companion to Canadian Literature. 1997. Don Mills: Oxford University Press Canada, p.1085.
  2. ^ Gibson, Graeme. Eleven Canadian Novelists. 1973. Toronto: The House of Anansi Press. 138.
  3. ^ The Porcupine's Quill. "The Porcupine's Quill | Book Listing | the Box Social & Other Stories". Archived from the original on 2013-07-31. Retrieved 2013-01-27. The Box Social and Other Stories. Retrieved on January 27, 2013.
  4. ^ Fraser, J. Lynn. May 2007. 'Whiteoaks of Jalna'. CM : an Electronic Reviewing Journal of Canadian Materials for Young People, 13.19. Retrieved June 16, 2009, from CBCA Reference database. (Document ID: 1275281041)
  5. ^ "Dear Life by Alice Munro". Quill & Quire, November 2012.
  6. ^ Andrews, Jennifer. 2001. 'Native Canadian gothic refigured: Reading Eden Robinson's Monkey Beach'. Essays on Canadian Writing,(73), 1-24. Retrieved June 16, 2009, from CBCA Reference database. (Document ID: 76040741).
  7. ^ Bode, R., Clement, L. D., & Bode, R. (2015). L.M. montgomery's rainbow valleys: The Ontario years, 1911-1961. Montréal, CA: McGill-Queen's University Press.
  8. ^ Andrews, J. (2001). Native canadian gothic refigured: Reading eden robinson's monkey beach. Essays on Canadian Writing, (73), 1-24.
  9. ^ Belyea, Andrew D. Redefining the Real: Gothic Realism in Alice Munro's "Friend of My Youth", ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 1998.
  10. ^ Berndt, Katrin. "“The Ordinary Terrors of Survival: Alice Munro and the Canadian Gothic”." Contemporary Literary Criticism, edited by Lawrence J. Trudeau, vol. 370, Gale, 2015. Literature Resource Center, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/H1100118829/LitRC?u=lond95336&sid=LitRC&xid=d1fb0715. Accessed 27 May 2018.
  11. ^ Ransom, Amy J. "Sugars, Cynthia. Canadian Gothic: Literature, History and the Spectre of Self-Invention." Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts, vol. 26, no. 1, 2015, p. 195+. Academic OneFile, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A531845668/AONE?u=lond95336&sid=AONE&xid=0a7f7a80.
  12. ^ Bentley, D. M. R. (1993). The borders of nightmare: The fiction of john richardson by michael hurley, and: The canadian brothers; or, the prophecy fulfilled. A tale of the late american war by john richardson (review). University of Toronto Quarterly, 63(1), 211-214.
  13. ^ Ingham, David. "Bashing the Fascists: The Moral Dimensions of Findley's Fiction". Studies in Canadian Literature. Retrieved on December 3, 2007.
  14. ^ Fiamengo, Janice Anne, ed. (2014). Home ground and foreign territory: essays on early Canadian literature. Reappraisals: Canadian Writers. Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press. pp. 115–131. ISBN 978-0-7766-2141-8.
  15. ^ a b Kulperger, Shelley (2009-08-04), "Familiar Ghosts: Feminist Postcolonial Gothic in Canada", Unsettled Remains, Wilfrid Laurier Press, pp. 97–124, ISBN 978-1-55458-294-5, retrieved 2024-04-21
  16. ^ Spooner, Catherine; McEvoy, Emma, eds. (2007-10-08). The Routledge Companion to Gothic. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-15103-5.
  17. ^ Chartier, Armand (October 1972). "French-Canadian Gothic: Notes on Anne Hébert'sKamouraska". American Review of Canadian Studies. 2 (2): 66–75. doi:10.1080/02722017209481341. ISSN 0272-2011.