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Tuesday, February 12, 2019

Gothic Elements in A Curtain of Green and Death of a Traveling Salesma

Gothic Elements in A mantlepiece of Green and  Death of a Traveling Salesman    In fiction, Gothicism is defined as a style that emphasizes the grotesque, mysterious, and desolate. Eudora Welty makes frequent use of the grotesque in her work, very much pairing it with elements of mystery, as in Keela, The friendless Indian Maiden. However, she usually deals with forlornness as a separate element, as in Death of A Traveling Salesman, in which the focus is placed on the lonely, fruitless origination of R.J. Bowman. One early subscriber of A Curtain of Green, in which Keela, The Outcast Indian Maiden appears, wrote that Welty was preoccupied with the demented, the deformed, the queer, and the highly spiced (Vande Kieft 67). Though the presence of these elements is pronounced, the reviewer has failed to look past these devices to see Weltys purpose. Weltys focus is never centered around the grotesque itself rather she focuses on her characters reactions to it and the contrast it creates. She does not try mystically to transform or anonymously to interpret, she me...

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