Episode 7: Born in the Dark — The American Gothic Tradition
What is the real horror in American Gothic if it's not ghosts and castles? It's the dark history hidden beneath the floorboards?
In this episode of Reflections on Gothic Fiction, I step back from regional Gothic traditions like Southern, Appalachian, and Alaskan Gothic to explore the larger tradition they all emerged from: American Gothic itself.
Because when Gothic fiction crossed the Atlantic, it had to reinvent itself. America had no castles, no aristocracy, no ancient abbeys slowly rotting in the fog. What it had instead was wilderness, Puritan guilt, violence, dispossession, isolation, and histories people were already trying to bury.
From Charles Brockden Brown and Washington Irving to Edgar Allan Poe, Shirley Jackson, Toni Morrison, and Stephen King, this episode traces how American Gothic developed into a tradition obsessed with what refuses to stay hidden.
We explore:
• why American Gothic feels psychologically different from European Gothic
• how guilt and inherited violence shaped the tradition
• why the landscape itself became Gothic
• the blurred line between Gothic fiction and horror
• and how Southern Gothic, Appalachian Gothic, and other regional traditions grew out of these foundations
If you’ve ever wondered why American Gothic feels so haunted, even when there are no ghosts, this episode is for you.
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