Imaginary Worlds - Why The Gothic Keeps Gaslighting Us
Episode Date: June 7, 2023Our culture is going through a Gothic Revival -- partly thanks to the influence of Tim Burton. Gothic literature may have thrived in the 19th century (and my high school English class) but a lot of co...ntemporary writers are returning to the tradition, creating stories that reimagine the past or look at the present through a Gothic lens. I talk with Xavier Aldana Reyes of the Manchester Centre for Gothic Studies about how The Gothic is like a mode or a sensibility that can take over any genre. Kit Mayquist, author of Tripping Arcadia: A Gothic Novel, discusses why The Gothic feels like the right fit for a generation that was gaslit while coming of age during war and a recession. And Leila Taylor, author of Darkly: Black History and America's Gothic Soul, explains that America will always be haunted by its Gothic past until we confront it. Featuring readings by voice actor Tanya Rich. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
A special message from your family jewels brought to you by Old Spice Total Body.
Hey, it stinks down here. Why do armpits get all of the attention?
We're down here all day with no odor protection.
Wait, what's that?
Mmm, vanilla and shea. That's Old Spice Total Body deodorant.
24-7 freshness from pits to privates with daily use.
It's so gentle. We've never smelled so good.
Shop Old Spice Total Body Deodorant now.
So what's it like to buy your first cryptocurrency on Kraken?
Well, let's say I'm at a food truck I've never tried before.
Am I going to go all in on the loaded taco?
No, sir.
I'm keeping it simple, starting small.
That's trading on Kraken.
Pick from over 190 assets and start with the 10 bucks in your pocket.
Easy.
Go to kraken.com and see what crypto can be.
Non-investment advice.
Crypto trading involves risk of loss.
See kraken.com slash legal slash ca dash pru dash disclaimer for info on Kraken's undertaking
to register in Canada.
You're listening to Imaginary Worlds, a show about how we create them and why we suspend
our disbelief.
I'm Eric Molenski. I'm always on the lookout for new speculative fiction to read.
I like to check out the best of the year lists or look who gets nominated for awards.
And I've noticed in a lot of new fantasy novels, there's one word which keeps coming up over and over again in the descriptions. Gothic. When I see the word
gothic, I think about the kind of books that I was assigned to read in high school.
Wuthering Heights, Rebecca, The Picture of Dorian Gray. But these marketing teams at
publishing houses seem to know that the word gothic is hot. Like that's going to sell books.
Some of these new novels are set in the same time period
as classic Gothic books, but they have a perspective on history that feels more contemporary.
For instance, there was a novel called The Essex Serpent by Sarah Perry. It's a Loch Ness monster
type story that's set in the 19th century, but it deals more openly with feminist themes than
Gothic novels that were actually written in the 19th century. Last it deals more openly with feminist themes than gothic novels that
were actually written in the 19th century. Last year, the book was turned into a miniseries for
Apple TV. The serpent is not real. But what if it is? No. No, the serpent is an invention. It's a symptom of the times we live in. Exciting times. Of great change
that bring real fears with them. So you're against progress?
But not all of these new gothic novels are set in the past.
Some are set in the present. They're modern gothics. What would that be like?
Well, for example, last year there was a critically acclaimed novel called Our Wives
Under the Sea by Julia Armfield. It's about a woman who is trapped in a claustrophobic marriage.
Her wife is a scientist who has just come back from a deep sea expedition,
but she's not the same person as she was before she left.
In fact, something is very wrong with her. Here is the actress Tanya Rich reading from the novel.
The ocean is unstill, she says, farther down than you think, all the way to the bottom
things move. She seldom talks this much or this fluently.
Legs crossed and gaze towards the window, the familiar slant of her expression, all her features
slipping gently to the left. I'm aware by now that this kind of talk isn't really meant for me,
but it's simply a conversation she can't help having, the result of questions asked in
some closed-off part of her head. There are no empty places, she says, and I imagine her glancing
at cue cards, clicking through slides. However deep you go, she says, however far down you'll
find something there. I used to think there was such a thing as
emptiness, that there were places in the world one could go and be alone. This, I think, is still
true. But the error in my reasoning was to assume that alone was somewhere you could go,
rather than somewhere you had to be left.
Zivier Aldana Reyes teaches at the Manchester Centre for Gothic
Studies in the UK. Goes by Xavi for short. I asked him, is this gothic trend for real?
Or am I imagining things? Which is a very gothic question to ask. He said, no, you're not imagining
things. This trend really took off around 2020, 2021. Well, there has been an explosion of
Gothic fiction the last two years in particular. Again, I don't know if this is directly connected
to the pandemic. Maybe people just had more time to write these novels, or maybe there's more of a
market at the moment. I don't know. But yes, I am finding it difficult just to catch up with
the amount of Gothic that's been created.
Connecting it to the pandemic makes sense to me.
You have all these writers who are trapped inside.
They probably felt like they were haunting their own homes.
I guess it would make sense, wouldn't it, that at a time in which we feel claustrophobic,
we will write about claustrophobic things.
Kit Mayquist is the author of Tripping Arcadia, which is a gothic novel set in modern day. At the time I started writing Tripping Arcadia, I really wanted to take those themes
and that feeling you get from a historical gothic novel and weave it into a more contemporary
narrative. Kit agrees that this trend took off around 2020, but he thinks it was more than just a pandemic.
The one I always start off with that I really credit spearheading this revival of Gothic literature is Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno Garcia.
Mexican Gothic was a big hit when it came out three years ago.
The story takes place in Mexico in the 1950s.
The protagonist is sent to live with her relatives in a house that is possessed by
something sinister and supernatural. And I can attest, dear reader, that book is freaky and scary.
And I think that book really awoke the fascination with Gothic narratives and the Gothic story in terms of, you know,
modern audiences and interests. And I think that really opened up a lot of doors
to this resurgence that we're seeing now.
As Catalina spoke, the smile on her lips died. Her eyes, which had been distant,
suddenly fell on Noemi with the sharpness of a blade. She clutched
Noemi's hands and leaned forward, speaking low.
I need you to do a favour for me, but you can't tell anyone about it. You must promise
you won't tell. Promise.
I promise.
There's a woman in town. Her name is Marta Duval. She made a batch of medicine for me,
but I've run out of it. You must go to her and get more, do you understand? Yes, of course. What kind of medicine is it? It doesn't matter.
What matters is that you do it, will you? Please say that you will and tell no one about it.
Yes, if you want me to. Catalina nodded. She was clutching Noemi's hand so tightly that her nails were digging into the soft flesh of her wrists.
Catalina, I'll speak to sh-
Shh, shh, shh. They can hear you.
Who can hear me? Noemi asked slowly, as her cousin's eyes fixed on her and blinking.
It's in the walls, she said.
in the walls, she said. The walls speak to me. They tell me secrets. Don't listen to them.
Press your hands against your ears, Naomi. There are ghosts. They're real. You'll see them eventually.
And then there was the novel The Hacienda by Isabel Cáñaz, which came out last year.
It also tells the story of a young woman in Mexico who moves into a haunted house.
But her story takes place in the early 19th century, and it deals with subjects like colonialism and indigenous cultures in a way that 19th century Gothic novels rarely did.
They both betray very good knowledge of the Gothic tradition.
Mexican Gothic is full of citations and quotes to Gothic texts. The Hacienda is essentially
towing the line between historical war drama and supernatural fiction. So anyone reading these
stories probably is familiar with texts like Rebecca. So they come to it with a series of
expectations that they can then subvert and take in their own ways.
Another reason why this trend fascinates me is because a lot of writers who are embracing the
Gothic don't fit the old, white, heteronormative world that I usually think of as Gothic.
Although Kitt says those books always appealed to him.
Gothic. Although Kitt says those books always appealed to him. Gothic for a long time has always been a home for outsiders or people who don't feel like they're included in traditional narratives,
so as a queer individual, myself and a lot of my queer friends have always been drawn to gothic literature because it didn't shy
away from issues or the feelings that we had by feeling isolated or ignored or having society
tell us we were monstrous. But like any gothic tale, there are a lot of doors to open to get
to the bottom of this mystery on why the gothic
has become such an effective storytelling device lately. And as we keep unlocking these doors,
frightening things might jump out at us. So light the candles, close the drapes,
we're going deep into a gothic revival after the break.
This episode is brought to you by Secret.
Secret deodorant gives you 72 hours of clinically proven odor protection free of aluminum, parabens, dyes, talc, and baking soda.
It's made with pH-balancing minerals and crafted with skin-conditioning oils.
So whether you're going for a run or just running
late, do what life throws your way and smell like you didn't. Find Secret at your nearest Walmart
or Shoppers Drug Mart today. First of all, I want to address a pretty big kind of academic question.
address a pretty big kind of academic question. What is gothic? Is it a genre, sub-genre,
or maybe a feeling or a sensibility? Zavi says there actually is no clear answer.
There has been a tendency, especially in academic circles, to move more towards the mode label because that gives it more fluidity. You know, it's less bound to a time and place or a set of characters
and it's much more expressive of a sensibility.
But the Gothic for me is symbolized
by a claustrophobic version of the past normally.
And you can define that however you like.
It normally takes the shape of a claustrophobic space.
So whether that is a medieval castle
or a Victorian mansion
or even a lift, I guess, could be potentially Gothic.
Or a set of thoughts or beliefs that are just as claustrophobic.
They tend to come hand in hand, though.
And normally, in terms of its concerns, it will be all sorts of binaries between good and evil, the barbaric and the modern, men against women, male being more patriarchal,
villainous characters, especially in the female Gothic tradition. Again, here's Kit.
One of the cornerstones of Gothic literature has always been this idea that it's much more
of a psychological form of horror. And it really takes the horror and horrifying element of any kind of story.
So like, you know, traditionally we think of like, okay, horror is monsters and zombies.
It's this great paranormal entity who's trying to attack you.
But Gothic really brings that inward.
So the horror is less of an outside force and the horror tends to be much more psychological and inward.
Lila Taylor is the author of a nonfiction book called Darkly, Black History and America's Gothic Soul.
We're going to hear more about her book later in the episode.
But first, this is how she defines Gothic.
There's a combination of fear, sadness, and horror or terror and taking all of those things and romanticizing them.
I think it's romanticized melancholy and I think it's aestheticized fear.
aestheticized fear. And it's also seeing beauty in things that are supposed to be horrific or things that are supposed to be disgusting and repulsive. The things that are
creepy, things that are eerie. It's the Addams family. It's I think the gothic is sort of a
series of adjectives. Absolutely anything can be gothic.
So Jane Eyre falls into the category that people often call the female gothic.
Dracula is gothic horror.
Frankenstein, gothic science fiction.
The Secret Garden is a gothic children's story.
And of course, in the U.S., we have southern gothic.
And speaking of the Addams Family, one of the most popular shows on Netflix last year was Wednesday, which was produced by Tim Burton.
It's about Wednesday Addams going to an elite boarding school full of mysteries and annoying people she can't stand.
When I look at you, the following emojis come to mind. Rope, shovel, hole.
By the way, there are two D's in Addams. If you're going to gossip about me, at least spell my name correctly.
That brings me to another question.
Is there a difference between goth and gothic?
I mean, I usually think of them as separate things, but Kit was into both.
I was a teenager in the emo goth subculture,
and so I had my Tim Burton hoodies and things like that.
In fact, he says Tim Burton was like a gateway drug into gothic literature. I mean, I also grew
up watching Tim Burton movies, but I'm a generation older than him. I saw them in the theaters.
Then he told me something I hadn't thought about. And it helped me understand why so many writers who are taking part in this Gothic revival are in their 30s. I mean, I was like 10 when like 9-11 and the start of war really
came about as well. So from the time I was like old enough to really be watching television,
it was kind of death and these sort of themes everywhere you looked contrasted with a very hyper-pop,
futuristic-focused Y2K kind of narrative.
And it didn't match up.
And I think that's why a lot of people ended up being drawn to Gothic subcultures and things
like Emo Music and Tim Burton and things like that was because it offered this comfort and this place of understanding and this place of truth. And then from that, you are introduced to Gothic literature and horror movies and things like this that then continue on with that theme of we're going to talk about the things that no one else really wants to talk about.
Gothic stories aren't just about processing difficult emotions or dark thoughts.
There is usually a class element as well.
Gothic literature really took off during the Industrial Revolution,
when massive amounts of wealth were being created, dividing old money from new money
and the rich from everyone else. Kitt related to those issues of class on a personal level.
He graduated high school when the Great Recession hit. And once again, he found himself immersed in
the Gothic, especially reading stories about wealthy, unaccountable villains.
stories about wealthy, unaccountable villains. Yes. Yeah, absolutely. And if you ask me to think of a horrifying monster in today's world, it's going to be someone with absolute power and
control with enough wealth to hurt you in 20 different ways, even if it's not necessarily
physical. That's why his novel, Tripping Arcadia,
is about a young woman who goes to work for a super-rich family
that can ruin people's lives without a second thought.
But the character does have one tool at her disposal.
More than 6,000 years separate us from the origin of poisons
and the notion that as humans we have other methods of murder
than how sharp we make our arrows or swords. I had come to know too well the toxic lore of
the botanicals that lay in my aunt's garden. Beneath the warmth of the sun and her guiding
hand, I had received an education on the subject of poisoning, beyond my wildest dreams, and as a result had
unintentionally developed a predisposition to the thought of such an act, and how shockingly easy
it would be if ever a reason found me. The modern age did not want to believe in poisons.
The fear of poison had been replaced by that of guns and nuclear attack and disease.
In each of these was a monster more bold and less archaic,
and so the poetry of poison faded in favor of its brothers.
But the deed itself never left.
Now, there is a long tradition of gothic villains that are physically monstrous,
like the Phantom of the Opera or Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
But Zavi says in a lot of current Gothic stories, the villains don corporations and the power of larger systems of economic imbalance, we are actually seeing a shift in terms of who
gets gothicised. And this is why we look now, for example, at older horror films from the 1930s,
for example, and we look at the ways in which they make those connections between monstrosity
and deformity, and we look back on those now and think, wow, you couldn't imagine making those
films today. Our notion of evil is now moral rather than physical. So of course, it makes
sense that it is the processes of greed and oppression and repression that have become the
Gothic monsters. One of the most common supernatural villains in gothic stories
are vampires. In the 90s and early 2000s, vampires were often used as metaphors to talk about issues
of sexuality, like twilight or true blood. But I've noticed in a lot of these new gothic stories,
vampires are back to being scary villains again, and not just because they drink blood.
Vampires are back to being scary villains again, and not just because they drink blood.
They're now often representing a powerful elite that uses and abuses people.
Like in the recent novel House of Hunger by Alexis Henderson.
It's about a young woman with very few job prospects.
So she goes to work as a, quote, blood maid for an aristocratic vampire.
The worst of their job was the bleeding,
which bloodmaids did frequently to satisfy the carnivorous appetites of the nobles who relied on the healing properties of their blood
as a lavish remedy for their varying ailments.
But the way Marion saw it, work was work,
and the work of a bloodmaid was far easier than that of the average factory hand in prane.
Besides, Marion had heard it rumoured that of the average factory hand in Prane. Besides, Marion
had heard it rumoured that upon the end of their tenure, blood maids were rewarded with
lavish pensions that ensured they'd live their remaining days in accordance to the same standard
of luxury they'd been accustomed to during their time as blood maids. Agnes glowered
down at the newspaper. They've got some nerve to advertise a posting for a blood whore in the matrimony column of all places.
Where else would you have them place it? A blood maid could hardly be called a servant.
Well, they're far from wives, said Agnes.
And when she spewed the word, she flecked the newspaper with spit.
Whoring for a night lord is nothing like marriage.
Marion saw little difference between the two. Leila Taylor thinks this new type of gothic villain, whether they're human or not,
is a perfect fit for our disorienting digital media landscape. We're in this world where the truth really doesn't matter, where lies are just as powerful, if not more powerful and oddly valid in a strange way than the truth.
Like reality doesn't really matter. And it's a very strange world to manage.
It's fighting madness. How do you react to that? And I think that's very gothic. It's very gaslighting.
In case you didn't catch that, she said gaslighting. Last year, Mirriam-Webster declared that gaslighting was the word of the year.
The term comes from a Gothic play, which was later adapted into a famous movie with Ingrid Bergman.
What's interesting is that term gaslight, as it's originally used in the play and the film,
has to do with the gaslight system of Victorian London that they live in.
And it's an indication, of course, that the main character, if you know the story, is being manipulated into thinking she's losing her mind.
Elizabeth, did you turn on the gas? Did you turn on the gas anywhere downstairs just now?
Oh, I know them. I've had it on in the kitchen all evening, that's all.
just now. Oh, I know them. I've had it on in the kitchen all evening, that's all.
So it's interesting that that term is then used as a way of signalling, well, you know, not being heard, being manipulated, being oppressed. Yeah, it's a beautiful analogy
that then becomes a word of its own, but it has a longer tradition. The idea of the
female heroine being cheated out of their inheritance by a manipulative, normally male character who's got their own personal interests in mind, as happens in Gaslight, is really old.
And, unfortunately, timeless.
Gaslight was written in the 1930s.
It takes place in the 1880s.
That is typical of Gothic stories.
They often use the past to talk about the present. The past offers that kind of buffer zone for us
to think about our own progress. One of our more Gothic filmmakers, Guillermo del Toro,
does this in a lot of his films. There was Crimson Peak from 2015, which was about a woman in the early 1900s
who moves into a haunted house.
I mean, that film is set in the early 20th century,
but many of the concerns that the film raises
about the domestic entrapment of women
is still very valid today in the age of the Me Too movement.
Kit is also a big fan of that movie.
There's so many Easter eggs and callbacks to stories i mean del toro really took a little piece of every classic gothic story and
kind of fit it into this one narrative there was such a hatred in her eyes and intelligence.
She knows who I am and she wants me to leave.
Nonsense, my dear.
You're not going anywhere.
You had a bad dream.
You were sleepwalking.
No, I'm afraid I should go mad if I stay.
My darling, you're imagining things.
Guillermo del Toro also uses ghosts in his 2001 film The Devil's Backbone.
You may not understand, for example, the particular ghosts of the Spanish Civil War,
but you understand the concept of the ghost.
And when Guillermo del Toro uses it in The Devil's Backbone to talk about the legacy of silence in that country,
it becomes possible for you to understand that particular struggle.
to understand that particular struggle.
Alongside vampires, ghosts are the most common supernatural character that you'll find in a Gothic story.
And ghosts are often used as metaphors to talk about the past,
especially repressed trauma.
The villain is usually trying to stop the protagonist
from learning about this past,
even if the ghost can't be exercised until the past
is dealt with. That's what Lila Taylor's book Darkly is about. She looks at why the gothic
sensibility resonates so much in American culture, where we don't have a tradition of ancient castles
and aristocratic families. But that was not the original plan for the book. At first, it was going to be about her experience being into goth subcultures and being Black.
As a teenager, she was into Tim Burton movies, Anne Rice novels, and goth punk bands.
And I was interested in looking at what it was like to be kind of twice marginalized,
to be sort of a minority within a subculture.
marginalized to be sort of a minority within a subculture. And I kind of realized, you know,
black goths are like any other kind of goths. That's the kind of whole point is that we all like the same stuff and listen to the same music and wear the same kind of clothes. But the
difference between a black goth in America and, you know, a white goth in America,
is that they're a Black person in America, and that was the difference.
And then I was listening to Billie Holiday's version,
the original version of Strange Fruit,
and I was like, this is the most goth song I've ever heard.
And I started looking at Toni Morrison's Beloved. I was like, this is horror. This is a classic
gothic haunted house book. And both of these things, Strange Fruit, Beloved, were based on
true stories. They're based on actual experiences of Black people in this country.
And it started to gel this idea of the Gothic aesthetic, the Gothic sensibility.
It stems from the experience of the transatlantic slave trade and the experience of those people
and the misery and the blood and the misery and the blood and the death and
the sadness and the horror and all of those things that are kind of seeped into American history.
It has to come out somewhere. All of that anxiety and all of that trauma,
I think, comes out in art, in music, in literature and film.
comes out in art, in music, in literature, in film.
And today, a lot of educators and politicians across the U.S.
are acting like barons of a gothic manor,
saying, don't open that door.
Don't ask about what's in the attic.
There's nothing there.
You're imagining things.
That's Edgar Allan Poe. So many of his writings are about
skeletons in the closet and people, you know, hearts buried under floors and dead bodies. It's
all about buried, hidden death, hidden trauma, hidden fears that are literally in the building.
It's literally in the house. It's in the floorboards. And that's kind of very much what I think America is about. It really is about burying its history and trying to have
its sort of gleaming face forward and pretending that everything is great.
But a lot of that is under the guise of wanting to protect the feelings of white children. And one of the things that the Gothic does,
it faces that discomfort head on.
Instead of it being something to avoid,
all of those, quote, negative emotions
are the stuff that the Gothic is exploring.
That's why she says a film like get out is gothic i mean
there's the obvious factor that there's a well-to-do family living in a creepy house with
sinister supernatural secrets but she thinks the whole movie has a gothic sensibility
in the beginning of get out it's so brilliant Because all it is is a black man walking alone
in a white affluent suburban neighborhood
and how frightening that is
and how unnerving and scary that is.
It's crazy.
You got me out here in this creepy,
confusing-ass suburb.
I'm, though.
I feel like a sore thumb out here.
And I think the idea of fear as a tool of oppression.
Yeah, it's interesting.
When I'm thinking back at all the Gothic stories I've seen,
that very often the motivation of the villain isn't greed, it's fear.
Whatever that fear is, whether that fear is loss of power, loss of influence, loss of money,
loss of love, whatever. It's that fear of the other. It's the fear of someone that is different from me and what can they take from me.
Zavi agrees. He thinks that in movies like Get Out, the real monster is systemic racism.
Like the monsters of the Gothic, none of these systems really die off, do they? They just
morph and change and get revived and you think you've
killed them, but they come back. Like in the 2021 film Candyman. In that franchise, the villain is
the vengeful spirit of a black man who was murdered in Chicago. I'm certainly not saying
that a ghost manifested by a collective storytelling killed a prominent art dealer.
manifested by a collective story telling killed a prominent art dealer. I'm just saying that all of a sudden your work seems eternal. It wasn't just poking its finger at white
liberalism as it had been done in Get Out, but also it's questioning the gentrification of certain
parts of cities, you know, and sort of like bringing everyone
into this question, you know,
who is complicit into this process of othering.
I have been focusing on film, TV, and literature,
but Leela says this Gothic revival
is happening in music too.
When she listens to the musician M. Lamar,
she hears a modern version
of what Billie Holiday was doing with Strange Fruit.
Em Lamar wears theatrical black clothes with heavy makeup,
and he sometimes uses the word gothic to describe his music.
Lila thinks his music is like a combination of opera and death metal,
because he can go from these very low vocal registers to very high ones.
metal, because he can go from these very low vocal registers to very high ones.
That is very gothic to me, this combination of one playing with identity, playing with genre, this roughness with sort of smooth beauty, things like that.
His songs, the lyrics in his songs are about the slave trade, and they are about death,
and they are about the slave trade and they are about death and they are about haunting.
But he refers to sort of like this Negro zombie that's going to kind of rise up from the depths
and sort of relive and take over things.
And there's a lot that it's both Gothic and goth about his work that I really, really admire.
Trends come and go, but the Gothic always comes back in style.
It taps into a lot of conflicting emotions that make us human, along with the desire
to bury those emotions.
And if the world makes you feel like you're going mad, even though you know you're not,
or you're pretty sure that you're not, there will always be a place for you in the Gothic.
That is it for this week. Thank you for listening. Special thanks to Xavier Aldana Reyes,
Kit Mayquest, Lila Taylor, and Tanya Rich. My assistant producer is Stephanie Billman.
If you like the show, please give us a shout out on social media
or leave a review wherever you get your podcasts.
That always helps people discover imaginary worlds.
The best way to support the show is to donate on Patreon.
At different levels, you get either free imaginary world stickers,
a mug, a t-shirt, and a link to a Dropbox account,
which has a full-length interviews of every guest in every episode.
You can also get access to an ad-free version of the show through Patreon,
and you can buy an ad-free subscription on Apple Podcasts.
You can subscribe to the show's newsletter at imaginaryworldspodcast.org.
And by the way, if you haven't seen the Saturday Night Live parody of Gaslight,
check it out.
Kate McKinnon is brilliant, as always.