The Gothic Novel (saylor.org)

Offered by Saylor.org,
The Gothic Novel (saylor.org)

What makes a novel “Gothic”? Scholars have debated this question for decades: some consider “the Gothic” a literary time period, spanning from the 1760s to 1820; others view it as a set of thematic concerns; still others understand it as a literary mode, in which contemporary authors like Stephen King continue to write. In this course, you will explore these and other definitions as you read a number of novels (and have the option to screen a film), attempting to define for yourself the term “Gothic.”

You will supplement your studies with critical literature on the Gothic novel and literary mode, critiquing and adapting the approaches and theories as you see fit. You will begin the course with an overview of approaches to the literary Gothic and an outline of its stereotypical characteristics and elements. You will then progress through the course by examining Gothic novels (and an optional film) in three thematic categories (which, as you will see, often overlap): Gothic Spaces, the Monstrous Other, and Gender and Sexuality. The Gothic novel is at one and the same time a specific English literary event and a set of literary qualities that persist in American and European novels and films to the present day. The Gothic era of English literature begins with the novelist Horace Walpole (1717-1797) and the 1765 publication of The Castle of Otranto: A Gothic Story. Some scholars suggest that the last great novel of the era is Melmoth the Wanderer by Charles Robert Maturin (1782-1824); it was published in 1820. The literary Gothic, on the other hand, refers to a set of themes and conventions, whose roots and sensibilities originate in the English Gothic novels of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century. After 1820, books and later films are described as Gothic because their creators have adapted and expanded the plots, narrative devices, and themes of the Gothic era of English literature, bringing new life to the genre by reflecting on contemporary political, social, and economic issues. What all Gothic literature and film have in common is the exploration of contemporary taboos, creating an atmosphere of terror. The taboo subjects change over time, but the fear and trembling that they invoke do not.

Go to Class
MOOC List is learner-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.

Related Courses

James Joyce (saylor.org) Saylor Academy
Saylor.org

James Joyce (saylor.org)

Many consider James Joyce the most influential author of the 20th century. His innovations in narrative strategy in particular continue to shape and inspire literature today. In this course, we will examine Joyce’s aesthetic and artistic sensibilities through close readings of the major works in his oeuvre, placing special emphasis on Ulysses, whose expansive length and nearly infinite depths has sustained scholarship for decades.

Legacy Course
Self-Paced
Introduction to Literary Studies (saylor.org) Saylor Academy
Saylor.org

Introduction to Literary Studies (saylor.org)

This course will introduce you to the history and practice of English as a scholarly discipline with the goal of preparing you for your future endeavors as an English major. It has been designed to familiarize you with the various tools that scholars have devised in order to facilitate the study of literary expression in English, from critical frameworks to close reading techniques.

Legacy Course
Self-Paced
Inglés Empresarial: el márketing y ventas (Coursera) Coursera
Arizona State University

Inglés Empresarial: el márketing y ventas (Coursera)

If you work in marketing, sales, or advertising, you already know that effective communication is a requirement. This can be even more difficult when expressing your ideas in a persuasive manner in English. In this course, you will learn to use English more efficiently while joining successful global professionals around the world. Develop your skills along with authentic characters that work in marketing and also work hard to improve their communication skills. Learn from your successes and failures, reflect on your own style, strengths, and improvement areas.

Jun 15th 2026
5-12 Weeks
Creative Writing: The Craft of Character (Coursera) Coursera
Wesleyan University

Creative Writing: The Craft of Character (Coursera)

At the center of a good story are the characters in it. In this course aspiring writers will discover how to build and bring to life complex, vivid and unforgettable characters. We will study the choices a writer makes to bring all characters to life on the page, and we will perform written exercises in order to develop a variety of writing and pre-writing techniques, in order to create a variety of characters.

Jun 15th 2026
4 Weeks
Modern Poetry and Poetics (saylor.org) Saylor Academy
Saylor.org

Modern Poetry and Poetics (saylor.org)

The decades between roughly 1890 and 1950 witnessed unprecedented efforts to create new art, new values, and a new culture in Europe and the United States. During this time Western writers, artists, and intellectuals questioned accepted aesthetic norms and produced radically experimental works of art and new understandings of what it means to live in modern times.

Legacy Course
Self-Paced
Speak English Professionally: In Person, Online & On the Phone (Coursera) Coursera
Georgia Institute of Technology

Speak English Professionally: In Person, Online & On the Phone (Coursera)

Do you want to speak better English? This course will help you reach that goal. Speak English Professionally: In person, Online and On the Phone will boost your English speaking skills. In this 5 week course, you will learn how to identify and make a strong personal introduction. You will develop and demonstrate the speaking skills for group discussions: how to agree or disagree, how to clarify, restate and summarise. You will develop and demonstrate the speaking skills for group discussions: how to agree or disagree, how to clarify, restate and summarize.

Jun 15th 2026
5-12 Weeks
Medieval Cultural and Literary Expression (saylor.org) Saylor Academy
Saylor.org

Medieval Cultural and Literary Expression (saylor.org)

The Medieval Period, or the Middle Ages, occurred between the fall of the Roman Empire and the beginning of the European Renaissance. In many ways, these “middle times” separate the ancient from the modern world, and although the Renaissance is traditionally touted as a period of particularly explosive creativity and cultural rebirth, we will discover that art and literature flourished in the Middle Ages as well.

Legacy Course
Self-Paced
Advanced Interviewing Techniques (Coursera) Coursera
University of Maryland, College Park

Advanced Interviewing Techniques (Coursera)

People interviewing for jobs today often fail because they are using yesterday's strategies. Recruiting technology has become more sophisticated, and the best employers are constantly changing the way interviews are done. This course gives you detailed strategies for handling tough competency-based, or behavioral, interviews so that you can communicate the knowledge, skills, and abilities that you have and that employers demand.

Jun 15th 2026
5-12 Weeks
Cultural and Literary Expression in Modernity (saylor.org) Saylor Academy
Saylor.org

Cultural and Literary Expression in Modernity (saylor.org)

In this course, we will work to develop a more nuanced understanding of the scope of cultural and literary expression in the late 19th and the first half of the 20th centuries and a working definition of what the vacuous-sounding term “modernism” might mean. We will attend to broad socio-historical happenings, from the birth of modernism in the late 19th century to the radical violence of the World Wars and the tragedy of the Holocaust and arrive at the post-modern moment, our post-colonial and technologically and economically globalized village.

Legacy Course
Self-Paced
Restoration & Eighteenth-century Drama (saylor.org) Saylor Academy
Saylor.org

Restoration & Eighteenth-century Drama (saylor.org)

This course will introduce you to the range of drama written and performed in England and Continental Europe between roughly 1660 and1800, a period often termed “the long eighteenth century.” In this course, we will refer to the “long-eighteenth century” as the period that began with the Restoration of the English monarchy with King Charles II following the English Civil War and concluded with the first years of the nineteenth century.

Legacy Course
Self-Paced
English Romantic Poetry (saylor.org) Saylor Academy
Saylor.org

English Romantic Poetry (saylor.org)

The Romantic Period in England took place during the “age of revolutions,” a span of time that saw not only the rapid industrialization of Europe but two significant national revolutions—one in France, and one in America. This revolutionary spirit in many ways fed and sustained the Romantic movement in English literature; its chief practitioners believed that poetry could literally transform the world and the way in which we understand it.

Legacy Course
Self-Paced