dc.description.abstract | The Castle of Otranto by Horace Walpole, published for the first time in 1764 and called by
his author “a wild story”, gave rise to gothic story, which became one of the most important
horror “forefathers”. Walpole’s intention was to rejuvenate an old literary genre, the romance.
A combination of the unrestricted imagination of the earlier works and the mimetic nature of
the contemporary texts was supposed to create an opportunity for its revival. The tale could
serve as an entertainment on its own. The reader was invited to play a game of terror. The
result, being a kind of artistic and worldview statement of the young generation, turned out
to be a great commercial success, although, as too avant-garde, it couldn’t initially boast of
many imitators. The new paths of development of gothic literature were laid by A. Radcliffe,
M.G. Lewis i Ch. Brockden Brown. From the varieties initiated by them and by Walpole the
contemporary horror and thriller derive, represented by numerous movies, belles-lettres,
comic books , RPGs, etc. | en |