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Copyright Irish Journal of Gothic & Horror Studies Mar 17, 2007

Abstract

Jarlath Killeen's invigorating essay in the first issue of this journal scrutinizes and reenvisions recent theorizations of that nebulous category -- 'Irish Gothic.' My approach is guided by Steven Mailloux's concept of 'rhetorical hermeneutics,' in which "the hermeneutic problem of how text and reader interact" is 'ultimately inseparable' from 'the rhetorical problem of how interpreters interact with other interpreters in trying to argue for or against different meanings.' It may now be time to go all the way -- retiring "the Irish Gothic tradition" and replacing it with "the Irish Gothic mode" -- as long as the latter phrase is understood to be shorthand for a distinct but discontinuous disposition, a gradually evolving yet often intermittent suite of themes, motifs, devices, forms, and styles, selected in specific periods, locations, and rhetorical situations, by a succession of different writers.

Details

Title
Gothic: A Rhetorical Hermeneutics Approach
Author
Haslam, Richard
Pages
3-26
Publication year
2007
Publication date
Mar 17, 2007
Publisher
Irish Journal of Gothic & Horror Studies
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1834048382
Copyright
Copyright Irish Journal of Gothic & Horror Studies Mar 17, 2007