“In a Glass Grotesquely”: Patrick McGrath’s Quaint Old England

Patrick McGrath’s new Gothic literature owes a great part of its early success to the singular, often gleefully weird depictions of England it offers, such as the bleak and misty Berkshire landscapes of Ceck Marsh in The Grotesque (1989). Although influences such as Evelyn Waugh’s have sometimes bee...

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Main Author: Jocelyn Dupont
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée 2009-11-01
Series:Études Britanniques Contemporaines
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/ebc/3685
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author Jocelyn Dupont
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author_sort Jocelyn Dupont
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description Patrick McGrath’s new Gothic literature owes a great part of its early success to the singular, often gleefully weird depictions of England it offers, such as the bleak and misty Berkshire landscapes of Ceck Marsh in The Grotesque (1989). Although influences such as Evelyn Waugh’s have sometimes been mentioned to characterize McGrath’s satirical approach to his home country, which he recently relinquished to become an American citizen, it appears that his portrayal of Albion is more singular than intertextual, infusing as it does England’s crumbling respectability with a high dose of uncanny grotesqueries. This paper investigates these strategies of distortions designed to make the distant homely incongruously uncanny by looking into a selection of three early, little known short stories—“The Lost Explorer” (1988), “Vigilance” (1989) and “Cleave the Vampire: A Gothic Pastorale” (1991)—in which the satirical vein is at its peak. As the recently published Trauma (2008)—McGrath’s first wholly American text—seems to have brought the author’s parodic incursions into familiar English territories to an end, the time seems right to undertake a synthetic delineation and analysis of McGrath’s quaintly Gothic England from Blood and Water (1988) to Port Mungo (2004).
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spelling doaj.art-fde859cd6dad4e6292b8ee691d6f78082022-12-22T01:09:34ZengPresses Universitaires de la MéditerranéeÉtudes Britanniques Contemporaines1168-49172271-54442009-11-0137879810.4000/ebc.3685“In a Glass Grotesquely”: Patrick McGrath’s Quaint Old EnglandJocelyn DupontPatrick McGrath’s new Gothic literature owes a great part of its early success to the singular, often gleefully weird depictions of England it offers, such as the bleak and misty Berkshire landscapes of Ceck Marsh in The Grotesque (1989). Although influences such as Evelyn Waugh’s have sometimes been mentioned to characterize McGrath’s satirical approach to his home country, which he recently relinquished to become an American citizen, it appears that his portrayal of Albion is more singular than intertextual, infusing as it does England’s crumbling respectability with a high dose of uncanny grotesqueries. This paper investigates these strategies of distortions designed to make the distant homely incongruously uncanny by looking into a selection of three early, little known short stories—“The Lost Explorer” (1988), “Vigilance” (1989) and “Cleave the Vampire: A Gothic Pastorale” (1991)—in which the satirical vein is at its peak. As the recently published Trauma (2008)—McGrath’s first wholly American text—seems to have brought the author’s parodic incursions into familiar English territories to an end, the time seems right to undertake a synthetic delineation and analysis of McGrath’s quaintly Gothic England from Blood and Water (1988) to Port Mungo (2004).http://journals.openedition.org/ebc/3685“The Lost Explorer”“Vigilance”“Cleave The Vampire”McGrathWaughdistorsions
spellingShingle Jocelyn Dupont
“In a Glass Grotesquely”: Patrick McGrath’s Quaint Old England
Études Britanniques Contemporaines
“The Lost Explorer”
“Vigilance”
“Cleave The Vampire”
McGrath
Waugh
distorsions
title “In a Glass Grotesquely”: Patrick McGrath’s Quaint Old England
title_full “In a Glass Grotesquely”: Patrick McGrath’s Quaint Old England
title_fullStr “In a Glass Grotesquely”: Patrick McGrath’s Quaint Old England
title_full_unstemmed “In a Glass Grotesquely”: Patrick McGrath’s Quaint Old England
title_short “In a Glass Grotesquely”: Patrick McGrath’s Quaint Old England
title_sort in a glass grotesquely patrick mcgrath s quaint old england
topic “The Lost Explorer”
“Vigilance”
“Cleave The Vampire”
McGrath
Waugh
distorsions
url http://journals.openedition.org/ebc/3685
work_keys_str_mv AT jocelyndupont inaglassgrotesquelypatrickmcgrathsquaintoldengland