Ann Radcliffe: A Gothic Heroine for Today

Ann Radcliffe and Women's Gothic Writing | A lecture by Dr Deborah Russell

46 min · 15. juni 2026
episode Ann Radcliffe and Women's Gothic Writing | A lecture by Dr Deborah Russell cover

Description

Ann Radcliffe (1764-1823) was “the great enchantress” of her generation, in the words of Thomas de Quincey. She changed the face of fiction in the Romantic period and shaped the development of Gothic romance. The extraordinary impact of her work also helped to cement an association between this genre and women writers and readers. But, of course, Radcliffe was far from the only woman writing Gothic fiction in the formative early days of the genre. This lecture will explore Radcliffe’s career in the context of the other women who inspired her, imitated her, and contested her vision of the Gothic.

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episode Ann Radcliffe and Romantic Culture | A lecture by Professor Michael Gamer artwork

Ann Radcliffe and Romantic Culture | A lecture by Professor Michael Gamer

In the final decade of the eighteenth century, Ann Radcliffe revolutionized the British novel, creating a new psychological fiction of suspense that would come to be called “the Radcliffe school.” Blending travel and terror, poetry and adventure, her writing was more than merely popular; it made her a sensation across media. Radcliffe novels were adapted by dramatists for the stage; her poems were set to music by composers; and her most famous scenes reimagined visually by artists. Jane Austen and John Keats loved her works; Walter Scott and Charles Dickens found early inspiration in her scenes of terror and dread. In this episode, Professor Michael Gamer discusses Radcliffe’s life, writing, and the astounding influence she had on Romantic writing and culture.

14. jan. 202648 min