2. Theory of Gothic Postmodernism
In this chapter, I will give the theoretical framework for my thesis. The main theoretical background
for my study is Gothic postmodernism, and in this study it is treated as a literary genre of its own.
Therefore, it will be useful to begin with a brief introduction to the literary genres of both Gothic
fiction and postmodernism. After the definition of these two genres, the focus of the latter part of
this chapter will be on what happens, when these two literary genres are combined and merged
together; this hybrid of the genres is Gothic postmodernism. The literary theory behind Gothic
postmodernism will function as the framework for my later analysis of Egan's novel The Keep.
In this chapter, I will also introduce some of the key concepts that are later discussed in this
thesis. One of the most important concepts for my analysis will be the use of metafiction in The
Keep, regarding how it is used to emphasize the Gothic postmodernity of the novel. Other issues I
will introduce in the following chapter will be how both imprisonment and escape are presented in
the novel as Gothic postmodern themes. Following this, I will move on to how modern fears and
anxieties relate to the Gothic postmodernity of the novel. The actual analysis of the novel will be
done through a close textual analysis.
As noted earlier, Gothic postmodernism as a literary genre has not yet been widely studied.
Due to this lack of academic material on the subject, the main theoretical background for this thesis
will be based on Maria Beville's study Gothic-Postmodernism: Voicing the Terrors of
Postmodernity (2013), alongside with other studies that have noted the existence of this specific
genre of literature. Some important thoretical background for both Gothic and postmodern fiction
will also be introduced in this thesis. Finally, this thesis supports the claim that Gothic
postmodernism is a genre of its own, and that Romantic Gothic, Victorian Gothic and Gothic
postmodernism logically represent different genres (Beville, 17).
Gothic postmodernism can be seen as a combination of two different literary genres, Gothic
and postmodern fiction. Even though the golden age of Gothic fiction was in the 18
th
century, and
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postmodernism emerged much later in the 20
th
century, I hope to prove that when combined, these
two seemingly very different literary genres can be seen to be strikingly similar, especially when
regarding the thematic elements studied in this thesis.
In relation to this, Beville argues that “Because the genre [Gothic postmodernism] is bridging
a gap of over two centuries it could mistakenly be seen as neo-gothicism or just postmodernism
with some Gothic elements”. However, she sees it as a distinct literary movement and a genre in its
own right (34). This is also in accordance with my own view of Gothic postmodernism, and the
scope through which Egan's The Keep will be analyzed in this thesis.
The literary genre of Gothic fiction has its origins in 18th-century Britain, where it emerged
with Horace Walpole's novel The Castle of Otranto (1764), which is regarded as the first “Gothic
story with its feudal historical and architectural setting, deposed noble heir and ghostly supernatural
machinations” (Botting, 14). After Walpole's novel, the genre “reached crescendo” in Ann
Radcliffe's Mysteries of Udolpho (1794) and Matthew G. Lewis's The Monk (1796) (Lloyd-Smith,
3).
Gothic fiction has recurring features, textual elements and character types that distinguish it
from other literary genres. Robert D. Hume has specified the elements that can almost always be
found in traditional Gothic narratives: “These 'Gothic trappings' include haunted castles,
supernatural occurrences (sometimes with natural explanations), secret panels and stairways, time-
yellowed manuscripts, and poorly lighted midnight scenes” (282). To further explain the essence of
Gothic fiction, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick has given a following definition regarding the distinctive
and recurring characteristics of the genre:
You know something about the novel's form; it is likely to be discontinuous and
involute, perhaps incorporating tales-within-tales, changes of narrators, and such
framing devices as found manuscripts or interpolated histories. You also know that
whether with more or less relevance to the main plot, certain characteristic
preoccupations will be aired. These include the priesthood and monastic institutions;
sleeplike and deathlike states; subterranean spaces and live burial; doubles; the
discovery of obscured family ties; affinities between narrative and pictorial art;
13
possibilities of incest; unnatural echoes or silences; unintelligible writings, and the
unspeakable; garrulous retainers; the poisonous effects of guilt and shame […] (262)
To clarify the conventions of traditional Gothic fiction even more, I refer to Teresa Goddu's
study on American Gothic fiction, where she states that the most common and distinguishable
features of Gothic fiction are haunted houses, evil villains, ghosts, gloomy landscapes, madness,
terror, suspense and horror (5). In order to perform a close reading of The Keep, it will be important
to recognize the generic features in the scope of traditional Gothic fiction, as well as inside the
genre of Gothic postmodernism, which combines traditional Gothic features with a postmodern
literary structure and thematic.
I already referred to various Gothic settings in the above. Often the setting of a Gothic novel
is a haunted castle or a mansion, and often the setting seems to function almost as a character of its
own. Egan's novel The Keep, for example, includes an old castle, caves and a prison as the settings
for the story. It is the setting of The Keep that gives the first hint towards the novel being related to
the Gothic tradition. The gloomy castle and the evil baroness entrenched inside the tower create an
unmistakenly Gothic backdrop for the events taking place in the novel. The first few lines of the
novel already set a specific tone to the story. This passage accentuates the Gothicity of the novel
through its description of the setting in which the story will take place. The more hidden layer in
this passage is the hint towards the importance of fiction and fictionality. These two themes will
become important later in the novel, in the metafictionality that is represented through the other
storyline happening in the prison, as this next passage from Egan's novel shows:
What he saw was solid as hell: two round towers with an arch between them and across
that arch was an iron gate that looked like it hadn't moved in three hundred years or
maybe ever. He'd never been to a castle before or even this part of the world, but
something about it all was familiar to Danny. He seemed to remember the place from a
long time ago, not like he'd been here exactly but from a dream or a book. (3)
In fact, the setting in Gothic literature is important in many ways. However, the discussion
considering Gothic spaces as literary structures seems to have been somewhat narrow, as Manuel
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Aguirre argues that traditionally Gothic buildings have engaged critics in discussions of sublimity,
feudal values, patriarchal oppression or feminine issues, but the physical structure of home, castle
or abbey has remained unattended (2). This is why in this thesis I wish to prove that the setting of
the novel is one of the most important elements when considering its Gothic postmodernity and the
themes of imprisonment and escape. In relation to this, Aguirre has stated that “it is easy to enter the
Gothic castle, hard to come out” (6).
When considering The Keep, Aguirre's statement describes the setting of the novel very well.
The instability of the physical setting becomes evident in the novel, as Danny finds out there is no
way for him to escape the castle and the village. As I mentioned earlier, the physical state of the
castle and the village seem to be in a constant state of change. The castle itself is also filled with
different kinds of traps and secret passages, which make it easy to lose one's way inside the building
and its surroundings.
In addition to the physical settings, we should also pay attention to narrative form, space and
narration in Gothic fiction. Aguirre divides Gothic narrative forms into three different geometric
metaphors: the Chinese-Box pattern – where the narrative is constructed as a series of stories-
within-stories – a labyrinth form, and the form of the concentric quest. My main focus here will be
on the Chinese-Box pattern, as it is the one that is used in The Keep, with its parallel storylines and
the embedded story-within-a-story. This form functions both as a Gothic narrative form and as a
“pre-postmodern device” (Aguirre, 5) related to the use of metafiction in the story, to which I will
return with more depth in the next chapter
Thematic elements relating to fear and anxieties are evident, when considering the genre of
Gothic fiction. This said, it could be argued that the fears of a certain time are often reflected in the
fiction that is published during that specific time period. According to Elena Emandi, the 18th
century witnessed a process of political, economic and social upheaval. In her words, “it's obvious
that the Gothic is to be linked to the anxieties and fears regarding the crises and the changes of the
15
present rather than to the terrors of the past” (82). Therefore, Gothic fiction has always been a way
to express the fears of certain time in writing, whether it be in the 18
th
century or today.
Keeping this in mind, Fred Botting has analyzed the essence of Gothic horror, and the way it
has transformed itself during the course of its beginning in the 18
th
century to this day:
Horror no longer lies in a barbaric, superstitious past, as it did for Radcliffe at the end of
the eighteenth century; it no longer concerns the return of monstrously unavowable
wishes as it did for Victor Frankenstein or James Hogg's Justified Sinner; it has nothing
in common with the ghostly reappearance of the guilty family secrets and horrid
paternal transgressions of the Victorians. Nor is it bound up with the primordial,
atavistic or decadent energies embodied by Count Dracula. Nor does it lie in the callous
sadism barely disguised by the nice veil of normality. If horror can be glimpsed
anywhere, it occupies a site other than the surfaces of postmodern self-reflection (141).
This said, it is evident that Gothic fiction, when employed to represent modern fears, most often has
to present itself in a form other than the traditional ghost story. Horror in Gothic postmodernism,
and in this case especially in The Keep, thus must come from something other than the most
traditional Gothic scares of haunting spirits and evil villains. It seems to be that it is not the physical
place – the castle – that is haunted in the novel, but instead the hauntings arise from the characters'
past.
In this thesis, I wish to analyze Egan's novel as concerning the fears and anxieties of the
modern world by employing a characteristically Gothic form and thematic elements. The fears and
anxieties in the novel are often more psychological than actual real-life threats, because the
characters suffer from different kinds of addictions, childhood traumas and existential crises. These
issues will be analyzed more in chapter 4, where I will focus on the postmodernity of the fears and
anxieties represented in the novel. Unlike Botting's description of modern Gothic horror, The Keep
does indeed borrow many of its elements of horror from early Gothic fictions, even though the fears
of the characters are more typical for the 21
st
century. This said, the novel is in a way a combination
of the traditional and the modern – the Gothic and the postmodern.
Now, as I have given the basic theoretical background for traditional Gothic fiction, I will
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move on to the other part of the genre of Gothic postmodernism. In the following part of my thesis,
I will introduce the term literary postmodernism, and the features that are associated with that
particular literary genre, as well as some historical background for the genre of postmodern fiction
If the literary features of Gothic fiction are somewhat easy to distinguish from those of other
literary genres, it is more difficult to define what postmodernism in fiction actually is.Yet, as it is
with Gothic fiction, there are many literary elements that can be classified as being typically
postmodern. Robert L. Laughlin characterizes postmodern fiction as having some or all of the
following literary elements: “double-coded language, or more popularly irony, self-referentiality,
experiments in form and style, contingent truths manifested through multiple, dialogic narratives
that work to subvert totalizing systems, and the breakdown of the autonomous, integrated
individual” (Laughlin, 285).
According to Laughlin, ”the postmodern fiction of the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s made use of
the above features to challenge the reader's expectations of how fiction could work, and more
broadly, how the world could be known and how a person could situate herself in the world”
(Laughlin, 285). Tim Woods adds that “[Postmodern fiction] is a mode that constantly
problematizes the making of fiction and history”(Woods, 69). According to Woods, in addition to
the often occurring re-writing of history and the problematization on how fiction is constructed,
postmodernism as a genre tends to use and abuse, install but also subvert conventions through either
irony or parody (70).
The self-awareness that is often employed in postmodern writing relates to the concept of
metafiction, which, as defined by Linda Hutcheon, is “fiction about fiction” – that is, fiction that
includes within itself a commentary on its own narrative and/or linguistic identity (Hutcheon, 14).
Thus, Beville argues that ”postmodernism then questions not only the nature of existence and
concepts of reality, but also takes up issues such as the fictionality and textuality of those realities”
(46).
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The self-reflexivity of Gothic postmodernism is an important feature when regarding this
thesis and Egan's novel. According to Beville, ”this implication of a newly or re-emerging self-
awareness in literature is highly significant, as it can be easily argued that it is the concept of 'self'
which ultimately drives narrative forward” (46). The Keep does not make an exception in the genre
of Gothic postmodernism, as the novel does indeed reflect itself quite often in the storyline. The
novel is constantly reminding the reader of its own fictionality, and this way the immersion of the
reader is constantly disrupted. This way, the novel strives to break the “fourth” wall between the
reader and itself.
Another key argument in the theory behind postmodernism was, according to Norbert Wiley,
that the concept of “the self” was changing in some way, or as he puts it: “human nature was being
transformed as a result of these sociocultural developments” (328). By these sociocultural
developments, he refers to issues such as globalization, digitalization and a semiotic turn (328).
Therefore, it could be argued that these important societal developments resulted in the idea of the
self changing. Because of these changes happening in the society and in the minds of the people, the
emergence of an entirely new kind of literary movement was inevitable.
There is also another role reserved for the idea of self-awareness in The Keep, as the main
protagonists of the novel all have to come to terms with their own psychological issues and traumas.
The castle as a setting seems to function as a catalyst for the soul-searching both Danny and Howie
have to do during the course of the novel. In a more tangible way, the whole reason for the castle's
existence in the novel seems to be that it has the power to somehow purify the minds of the people
who go there. This kind of purification – the ultimate catharsis – takes place at the end of the novel,
as Holly dives into the pool in the courtyard of the castle. This important scene also relates closely
to the idea of being free, and thus will be analyzed with more detail later in this thesis.
When considering the literary genres that are analyzed in this thesis, the concept of 'self' is
important, especially when regarding postmodernist fiction. McHale argues that ”the shift from
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modernism to postmodernism can be seen as a shift from epistemology to ontology, leading to a
focus on the 'self', and thus to a strong trend of self-consciousness in fiction” (9). This way, the self-
awareness and self-reflexivity I have referred to function as manifestations of this larger idea of
“the self” becoming more and more important in the postmodern era.
Keeping this in mind, Beville argues that ”selfhood in a postmodernist sense not only deals
with the self that is the reader and the self that is the author, but also the 'self' that is the novel” (47).
According to Beville, ”this appears to be a point of conjunction between postmodernism and the
Gothic, as devices such as the novel within a novel structure and distinctive textual self-
consciousness have been used in many early Gothic narratives, from The Castle of Otranto to
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