The Mysteries of Udolpho: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox book |
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| title = The Mysteries of Udolpho |
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| author = Ann Radcliffe |
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| elevator pitch = ''The Mysteries of Udolpho'' tells of Emily St. Aubert, who suffers misadventures that include the death of her mother and father, supernatural terrors in a gloomy castle, and machinations of an Italian brigand. ''(Wikipedia)'' |
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| genre = Gothic |
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| publication date = May 8, 1794 |
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A late eighteenth century [[Gothic Novel]] by Ann Radcliffe. The young heroine Emily St. Aubert's mother and father die, leaving her in possession of a mysterious family secret. After their death she is left in the care of her gold-digging aunt Madame Cheron, who marries the rich, malevolent [[Magnificent Bastard]] Count Montoni. When Emily discovers that Count Montoni is not only a murderer but the leader of an entire bandit army, his castle begins to take on a sinister, almost supernatural presence. Emily spends much of the book panicking and waiting for her fiancé Valancourt to rescue her. In true Gothic romance fashion, duels, battles, and mysterious images and sounds out of nowhere abound. |
A late eighteenth century [[Gothic Novel]] by Ann Radcliffe. The young heroine Emily St. Aubert's mother and father die, leaving her in possession of a mysterious family secret. After their death she is left in the care of her gold-digging aunt Madame Cheron, who marries the rich, malevolent [[Magnificent Bastard]] Count Montoni. When Emily discovers that Count Montoni is not only a murderer but the leader of an entire bandit army, his castle begins to take on a sinister, almost supernatural presence. Emily spends much of the book panicking and waiting for her fiancé Valancourt to rescue her. In true Gothic romance fashion, duels, battles, and mysterious images and sounds out of nowhere abound. |
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While much parodied and lambasted for its extravagant, |
While much parodied and lambasted for its extravagant, over-dramatic writing style (see Jane Austen's ''[[Northanger Abbey]]''), ''Mysteries of Udolpho'' remains one of the seminal works of Gothic literature and is the basis for nearly all Gothic fiction written afterwards. |
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=== Tropes featured in ''Mysteries of Udolpho'' include: === |
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{{tropelist}} |
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* [[The Aloner]]: Emily for much/most of the book. |
* [[The Aloner]]: Emily for much/most of the book. |
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* [[Axe Crazy]]: Montoni. Good God, Montoni. |
* [[Axe Crazy]]: Montoni. Good God, Montoni. |
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{{reflist}} |
{{reflist}} |
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[[Category:Horror Literature]] |
[[Category:Horror Literature]] |
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[[Category:The Mysteries of Udolpho]] |
[[Category:The Mysteries of Udolpho]] |
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[[Category:Literature]] |
[[Category:Literature]] |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Mysteries of Udolpho, The}} |
Latest revision as of 01:16, 2 April 2021
Written by: | Ann Radcliffe |
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Central Theme: | |
Synopsis: | The Mysteries of Udolpho tells of Emily St. Aubert, who suffers misadventures that include the death of her mother and father, supernatural terrors in a gloomy castle, and machinations of an Italian brigand. (Wikipedia) |
Genre(s): | Gothic |
First published: | May 8, 1794 |
A late eighteenth century Gothic Novel by Ann Radcliffe. The young heroine Emily St. Aubert's mother and father die, leaving her in possession of a mysterious family secret. After their death she is left in the care of her gold-digging aunt Madame Cheron, who marries the rich, malevolent Magnificent Bastard Count Montoni. When Emily discovers that Count Montoni is not only a murderer but the leader of an entire bandit army, his castle begins to take on a sinister, almost supernatural presence. Emily spends much of the book panicking and waiting for her fiancé Valancourt to rescue her. In true Gothic romance fashion, duels, battles, and mysterious images and sounds out of nowhere abound.
While much parodied and lambasted for its extravagant, over-dramatic writing style (see Jane Austen's Northanger Abbey), Mysteries of Udolpho remains one of the seminal works of Gothic literature and is the basis for nearly all Gothic fiction written afterwards.
- The Aloner: Emily for much/most of the book.
- Axe Crazy: Montoni. Good God, Montoni.
- Badass Army: Count Montoni's mercenary army.
- The Bechdel Test: Actually scores pretty well in this regard. Emily and Annette talk more about the mysterious things scaring them in the castle and a possible escape than romance and Emily's later encounter with women has her less interested in discussing Valencourt and more interested in discovering her family history.
- Beta Couple: Annette and Ludovico
- Bookworm: Emily and her father.
- Cultured Warrior: Valancourt, Morano and Montoni. Radcliffe loves this trope.
- Deus Ex Machina: EVERYWHERE.
- Elite Mooks: Montoni's higher-ranking bandits.
- Fainting: Emily. Let's just say it would very dangerous to make a Drinking Game out of her fainting fits.
- Gold Digger: Madame Cheron. It doesn't work out too well.
- Heroic Wannabe: Morano.
- I Lied: Montoni after he extorts Emily's property away from her.
- Incorruptible Pure Pureness: Emily
- The Ingenue: Emily again.
- Locked Room Mystery: Ludovico disappears from one.
- Love At First Sight: Valencourt falls in love with Emily pretty much as soon as he meets her.
- Luke, I Am Your Father
- Masculine Girl, Feminine Boy: Emily is far more mature and sensible than the more emotion driven, potentially unstable Valencourt.
- Misanthrope Supreme: You guessed it... Montoni
- Mysterious Protector: Valancourt and Morano. Granted the first never actually seems to do much of anything...
- Naive Newcomer: Emily, and Cheron
- Officer and a Gentleman: Valancourt
- Parental Abandonment: Both of Emily's parents die relatively early in the story, leaving her in the hands of her Gold Digger aunt and Evil Uncle.
- Pride Before a Fall: Count Montoni
- Private Military Contractors: Montoni's bandits double as mercenaries
- Rich Bitch: Madame Cheron and the Countess.
- Screw the Rules, I Have Money: Montoni
- Secret Keeper: Emily, Valancourt, and Montoni.
- Servile Snarker: Annette
- Stalker with a Crush: Morano
- Star-Crossed Lovers: Emily and Valancourt
- Ubermensch: Montoni
- War Is Hell