Monthly Archives October 2011

Happy Halloween!

May your day be filled with the best scares ever.  (Mine is filled with PhD applications and an evening class on the ghost stories of Henry James and Edith Wharton.  Both scary.)

TFL: Henry James and Haunted Hotels

Over at The Film League, I briefly blogged about Henry James’s short story “The Jolly Corner,” which I read as an eerie prelude to our October film, The Shining. In the story, Spencer Brydon has just returned to New York after 33 years abroad.  He is there to deal with some property, including a large [...]

The Doris Diaries are really just too great

“Of course if rumors are going around about Evaline I’ll have to drop her because my reputation would be at stake if I didn’t and I don’t want to ruin my reputation. Because it’s the easiest thing in the world for a girl to get talked about.”  I’m honestly considering working The Doris Diaries into my thesis about [...]

Seasonal Snapshot: Dia de los Muertos

Depravity in the Quaker City: George Lippard’s Monks of Monk Hall

George Lippard’s The Quaker City; Of The Monks of Monk-Hall is a strange and lurid entry into the subgenre of Philadelphia Gothic.  It is, in part, an homage to Matthew Gregory Lewis’s 1796 Gothic novel The Monk: A Romance.  Lippard does his damnedest to out-shock readers of it and other controversial, graphic, and even offensive novels [...]

Seasonal snapshot: Halloween

The City as Labyrinth: Brown’s Arthur Mervyn

If we’re talking Philadelphia Gothic, we’d be remiss if we didn’t mention Charles Brockden Brown’s other 1799 novel, Arthur Mervyn.  While Edgar Huntly skirts the city boundaries, this one plunges you right into the nightmare of its urban setting.  Philadelphia becomes a labyrinth of terror as an outbreak of yellow fever spreads among the inhabitants. Brown knows [...]

Vintage Movie Monday: The Uninvited (1944)

The Uninvited is a solid entry into the haunted house film subgenre.  It’s less scary than spooky, but the moody atmosphere and psychological mystery at its center make it a great Halloween watch.  I caught it on TCM this weekend, and I’m glad I did.  It reminded me of Hitchcock’s classic Rebecca, for several reasons, but [...]

In the Gothic Wilds of Pennsylvania: Charles Brockden Brown’s Edgar Huntly

Charles Brockden Brown is not only one of Philadelphia’s own, but also widely considered the most accomplished early American novelist.  Born into a Philadelphia Quaker family, Brown wrote several Gothic works set in and around the city.  The book I’ll look at next week takes place in the city proper; this week’s book, Edgar Huntly, [...]

Historic ways of folding letters

“These are theписьма-треугольники, the ‘triangular letters,’ the standard form of soldiers’ correspondence during the Great Patriotic War.” A fascinating blog on Russian letter folding, with gorgeous photos.