Sunday, August 4, 2019
A Nineteenth Century Ghost Story in The Turn of The Screw by Henry Jame
A Nineteenth Century Ghost Story in The Turn of The Screw by Henry James       The Turn of The Screw is a classic Gothic ghost novella with a wicket     twist set in a grand old house at Bly. The story is ambiguous; we     never fully know whether the apparitions exist or not and we are left     with many more questions than answers.       The Governess is left in charge of two young children, Miles and     Flora, of whom she later becomes obsessed with, describing them as     'angelic'. She has no contact with her employer from London, the     children's enigmatic uncle once there, sparking suspicions of the     children being unwanted. The anonymous Governess' obsessive nature is     taken to another level, with the darker side of Bly appearing. Her     sanity is called into question with her continued revelations of     apparitions around the family's country residence. The story itself     could not have had a bigger twist in it, from being overwhelmed by the     beauty and innocence of the two orphans under he care to being     convinced that ghosts of her predecessor and the master's former     valet, Miss Jessel and Peter Quint, both who die in mysterious     circumstances, have come to possess the souls of her charges. The     Governess begins to take ever more desperate measures to protect them,     but is it enough?       A typical Gothic story in many respects, The Turn of the Screw     conforms to our expectations by sharing many key features, style and     themes typical to nineteenth century horror fiction. A gothic story is     a type of romantic fiction that predominated in English Literature in     the last third of the 18th century and the first two decades of the 19th     century. The setting for this type of st...              ...riously wrong     with her.       Taking all of these points into account all of these points, I am sure     that you now agree that The Turn of the Screw is a typical 19th     century gothic ghost story. The story itself has many characteristics     typical of a gothic story and it is based around two apparitions,     which is a necessity in any ghost story. Gothic stories were very     popular during this period due to Darwin's book, 'The Origin of     Species' which hugely questioned Christian beliefs. People were no     longer sure of religion, and became very superstitious, with Ghost     stories becoming very popular. They had always thought god came first;     now science was starting to take over. In the 19th century people were     unsure about what was real in the world. The Victorians did not know     what to believe about in their world and spirituality.                        
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