Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Desert Gothic: Cormac McCarthy, Paul Bowles, and Don Waters

View through CrossRef
Abstract By comparing the work of Cormac McCarthy, Don Waters, and Paul Bowles, I will show similarities that might be recognized as constitutive of a subgenre of the Gothic, the “Desert Gothic.” In Paul Bowles's 1947 story “A Distant Episode,” a professor of linguistics is captured and cruelly tortured by the Reguibat in Morocco. The story is set against the ruins of a marabout (shrine or tomb) silhouetted in the desert night rank with foetid smells and mystery. McCarthy's West is likewise full of strange ruins and deserted churches, and the violence in the fiction can be extreme and often shocking. Inscrutable and hooded figures abound in the work of both authors, and the supernatural shimmers in and out of view. The desert makes monsters of men in the Saharan as it does in the Chihuahan. Don Waters's collection of short stories entitled “Desert Gothic” has already laid out the literary ground. Waters replaces the European Gothic of the pre-modernist churchyard with the postmodern Gothic of the swiftly crumbling roadside memorial, complete with curled photograph, decaying flowers, and a fading, poorly spelled letter. This article is a first step toward offering a critical definition of the Desert Gothic.
The Pennsylvania State University Press
Title: Desert Gothic: Cormac McCarthy, Paul Bowles, and Don Waters
Description:
Abstract By comparing the work of Cormac McCarthy, Don Waters, and Paul Bowles, I will show similarities that might be recognized as constitutive of a subgenre of the Gothic, the “Desert Gothic.
” In Paul Bowles's 1947 story “A Distant Episode,” a professor of linguistics is captured and cruelly tortured by the Reguibat in Morocco.
The story is set against the ruins of a marabout (shrine or tomb) silhouetted in the desert night rank with foetid smells and mystery.
McCarthy's West is likewise full of strange ruins and deserted churches, and the violence in the fiction can be extreme and often shocking.
Inscrutable and hooded figures abound in the work of both authors, and the supernatural shimmers in and out of view.
The desert makes monsters of men in the Saharan as it does in the Chihuahan.
Don Waters's collection of short stories entitled “Desert Gothic” has already laid out the literary ground.
Waters replaces the European Gothic of the pre-modernist churchyard with the postmodern Gothic of the swiftly crumbling roadside memorial, complete with curled photograph, decaying flowers, and a fading, poorly spelled letter.
This article is a first step toward offering a critical definition of the Desert Gothic.

Related Results

Born To Die: Lana Del Rey, Beauty Queen or Gothic Princess?
Born To Die: Lana Del Rey, Beauty Queen or Gothic Princess?
Closer examination of contemporary art forms including music videos in addition to the Gothic’s literature legacy is essential, “as it is virtually impossible to ignore the relatio...
The Black Mass as Play: Dennis Wheatley's The Devil Rides Out
The Black Mass as Play: Dennis Wheatley's The Devil Rides Out
Literature—at least serious literature—is something that we work at. This is especially true within the academy. Literature departments are places where workers labour over texts c...
Gothic Revival/Gothick
Gothic Revival/Gothick
Gothic Revival designates a key moment in architectural history. It also refers to the use of Gothic forms and motifs in furniture, design, and the decorative arts. It is inextrica...
Disgust in the Early Works of Cormac McCarthy
Disgust in the Early Works of Cormac McCarthy
Although critics quickly recognized that Cormac McCarthy was a writer who dealt with grotesque and violent material in an uncommonly forthright manner, many saw this aspect of his ...
Southern Gothic Literature
Southern Gothic Literature
Abstract Southern Gothic is a mode or genre prevalent in literature from the early 19th century to this day. Characteristics of Southern Gothic include the presen...
Cormac McCarthy and Leslie Garrett: A Literary Friendship
Cormac McCarthy and Leslie Garrett: A Literary Friendship
Drawing on print and film interviews with novelist Leslie Garrett by Knoxville journalist Don Williams, this article examines McCarthy’s friendship with Garrett from the perspectiv...
The Cormac Room
The Cormac Room
ABSTRACT This is not literary article about Cormac McCarthy but an article about Cormac the architect, builder, and stonemason. For three months Cormac was involv...
Cormac McCarthy's Poetics of Craftsmanship
Cormac McCarthy's Poetics of Craftsmanship
ABSTRACT “The work is everything,” says Ben, the main character of McCarthy's play The Stonemason, summing up his grandfather Papaw's view of the craft of the stonem...

Back to Top