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- The short story writer which I have chosen to research is Edgar Allen
- Poe. After reading one of his works in class, I realized that his mysterious style
- of writing greatly appealed to me. Although many critics have different views on
- Poe's writing style, I think that Harold Bloom summed it up best when he said,
- Poe has an uncanny talent for exposing our common nightmares and hysteria
- lurking beneath our carefully structured lives. ( 7) For me, this is done through
- his use of setting and narrative style.
- In many of Poe's works, setting is used to paint a dark and gloomy picture
- in our minds. I think that this was done deliberatly by Poe so that the reader can
- make a connection between darkness and death. For example, in the Pit and
- the Pendulum, the setting is originally pitch black. As the story unfolds, we see
- how the setting begins to play an important role in how the narrator discovers
- the many ways he may die. Although he must rely on his senses alone to feel
- his surroundings, he knows that somewhere in this dark, gloomy room, that
- death awaits him. Richard Wilbur tells us how fitting the chamber in The Pit
- and the Pendulum actually was. Though he lives on the brink of the pit, on the
- very verge of the plunge into unconciousness, he is still unable to disengage
- himself from the physical and temperal world. The physical oppreses him in the
- shape of lurid graveyard visions; the temporal oppreses him in the shape of an
- enormous and deadly pendulum. It is altogether appropriate, then, that this
- chamber should be constricting and cruelly angular (63).
- Setting is also an important characteristic is Poe's The Fall of the House
- of Usher. The images he gives us such as how both the Usher family and the
- Usher mansion are crumbling from inside waiting to collapse, help us to connect
- the background with the story. Vincent Buranelli says that Poe is able to
- sysatin an atomosphere which is dark and dull. This is one of the tricks which
- he laregely derived from the tradition of the Gothic tale (79). The whole setting
- in the story provides us with a feeling of melancholy. The Usher mansion
- appears vacant and barren. The same is true for the narrator. As we picture in
- our minds the extreme decay and decomposistion, we can feelas though the life
- around it is also crumbling.
- Narration is also an element in Poe's short story style that appears to link
- all of the stories together. He has a type of creativity which lets the reader see
- into the mind of the narrator or the main character of the story. Many of the
- characters in Poe's stories seem to be insane. The narrator often seems to have
- some type of psychological problems. For exapmle, In Poe's The Cask of
- Amontillado, the story opens with a first person narrator (Montresor) speaking
- about the planning of Fortunato's death. By the anger and remorse that
- Montresor has for Fortunato, one might think that this was a recent incident. It is
- not until the very end of the story that we realize, that the entire event occurred
- fifty years ago. David Herbert Lawrence says, To the characters in Poe's story,
- hate is as inordinate as live. The lust of hate is the inordinate desire to consume
- and unspeakably possess the soul of the hated one, just as the lust of live is the
- desire to possess or be possessed be the beloved, uterly. (33). Poe's stories
- often have narrators that feel extreme hate or extreme love for another character
- in the story.
- Another example of Poe's narrative style is seen in his story entitled, The
- Black Cat, where the narrator seems to have an obsession with pets. He has
- one special pet which is a black cat. Although their original relationship with
- each other is one of respect and love, the situation soon changes. The narrator
- becomes somewhat possessed with the hate for the car. He turns against his
- wife and stabs his cat in the eye. By the end of the story, he killed his wife in an
- attempt to kill the cat. Afterwards, the narrator does not even feel remorse for
- the wrongful death of his wife. Instead, he is just happy that the cat
- dissapeared. This is just another instance in which the reader wonders what is
- the driving force begins the narrator's insanity. Buranelli, In both Poe's The
- Cask of Amontillado and his The Black Cat, the barrators act without
- conscience. There are no doubts, hesitiations or second thought to impede the
- narrative. Both narrators just sought revenge (77).
- Even though there are many more elements to Edgar Allan Poe's short
- stories than just his creative use of narration and setting, these are
- characteristivs which has attracted the most attention. Poe has a way of writing
- in which he does not have to reveal too much, or paint a pretty picture for the
- reader in order to attract his attention. In D.H. Lawrence's Studies in Classic
- American Literature, the author states, Poe's narrowness is like that of a sword,
- not that of a bottleneck: it is effective rather than constricting.
- Nothing adventitious is in his great stories, only the essentials, the
- mininum of characterization, plot, and atmosphere. By ridding
- himself of everything except what is precisely to the point, he
- achieves unity of effect. (66).
- There is also a prominent distinction between right and wrong in Poe's
- tories. Viscous characters tend to come to a bad end. This lets the reader
- accept these endings as a triumph of good over evil. As stated by Buranelli:
- He has created a universe, given it psychological laws without
- denying the existence of the moral law, and peopled it with
- characters appropriate to such a universe. Puttng overt mortality
- out of bounds helps to give him uniqueness (74).
- After researching Edgar Allan Poe more in depth, I now have a much
- greater respect for him and a slightly different perspective of his stories. While it
- is still evident to me that narrative style and setting have a great deal to do with
- the development of Poe's short stories, I also realise now that we can't overlap
- and intertwine with other aspects of the story, making them equally as important.
- I will end with a quote found in Vincent Buranelli's Edgar Allan Poe: Even
- though Poe is often looked upon as a gifted psychopath who is
- describing with consumate artistry his personal instablities and
- abnormalitiesm the fact remains that his superiority is more than a
- matter of art. There is a violent realism in his macabre writings
- unequaled by the Americans who worked in the same genre.
- <br><br><b>Bibliography</b><br><br>
- 1. Bloom, Harold, Ed. Modern Critical Views on Edgar Allan Poe. New York:
- Chelsea House Publishers, 1985.
- 2.Buranelli, Vincent. Edgar Allan Poe. Boston: G.K. Hall & Co., 1977.
- 3. Lawrence, D.H. Studies in Classic American Literature New York: The Viking
- Press, 1961.
- 4.Lawrence D.H. Modern Critical Views on Edgar Allan Poe. Ed. Harold Bloom.
- New York: Chelsea House Publishers, 1985.
- 5. Wilbur, R. Modern Critical Views on Edgar Allan Poe. Ed. Harold Bloom. New
- York: Chelsea House Publishers, 1985.
- 6. Pickering, James. Fiction 100: An Anthology of Short Stories. NJ:Prentice
- Hall, 1995.
- 7. Poe, Edgar Allan. The Complete Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe. New
- York: Vintage Books, 1975.
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- Words: 1241
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