The grotesque elements in Poe’s “Black Cat” and Scudder’s “The White Cat”
The present essay focuses on the grotesque elements in Edgar Allan Poe’s the “Black Cat” and Horace Scudder’s “The White Cat”. Poe’s story is highly embedded with a lot of grotesque elements from the beginning to the end. These elements were presented through strange characters, mysterious happenin...
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Format: | Article |
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Australian International Academic Centre
2014
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_version_ | 1796972763947204608 |
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author | Endurance, Anegbe Wan Yahya, Wan Roselezam Majeed, Abdulhameed A. |
author_facet | Endurance, Anegbe Wan Yahya, Wan Roselezam Majeed, Abdulhameed A. |
author_sort | Endurance, Anegbe |
collection | UPM |
description | The present essay focuses on the grotesque elements in Edgar Allan Poe’s the “Black Cat” and Horace Scudder’s “The White Cat”. Poe’s story is highly embedded with a lot of grotesque elements from the beginning to the end. These elements were presented through strange characters, mysterious happenings, and degradation through death. Poe represents the struggle between the supernatural and the natural which he reinforces through the narrator who struggles to commit wrongdoings. Even in the mist of trying to restrict himself, the narrator still does not know what he did. In “The White Cat,” Scudder employs grotesque elements as well but his application is subtly done unlike Poe whose application is more pronounced. The underlying meaning of this short story is on the spell of enchantment. However, Scudder, like Poe, displays the supernatural events through the characters of the “fairies” who has magical power to change the once a beautiful princess to a white cat. Grotesque includes absurd and bizarre elements and pierces the conventional version of reality. However; in its ability to shock or offend, grotesque helps to expose the vulnerability in human depicted via these absurd element which will be explained in detail in the present study. |
first_indexed | 2024-03-06T08:33:08Z |
format | Article |
id | upm.eprints-35706 |
institution | Universiti Putra Malaysia |
last_indexed | 2024-03-06T08:33:08Z |
publishDate | 2014 |
publisher | Australian International Academic Centre |
record_format | dspace |
spelling | upm.eprints-357062016-02-04T01:00:17Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/35706/ The grotesque elements in Poe’s “Black Cat” and Scudder’s “The White Cat” Endurance, Anegbe Wan Yahya, Wan Roselezam Majeed, Abdulhameed A. The present essay focuses on the grotesque elements in Edgar Allan Poe’s the “Black Cat” and Horace Scudder’s “The White Cat”. Poe’s story is highly embedded with a lot of grotesque elements from the beginning to the end. These elements were presented through strange characters, mysterious happenings, and degradation through death. Poe represents the struggle between the supernatural and the natural which he reinforces through the narrator who struggles to commit wrongdoings. Even in the mist of trying to restrict himself, the narrator still does not know what he did. In “The White Cat,” Scudder employs grotesque elements as well but his application is subtly done unlike Poe whose application is more pronounced. The underlying meaning of this short story is on the spell of enchantment. However, Scudder, like Poe, displays the supernatural events through the characters of the “fairies” who has magical power to change the once a beautiful princess to a white cat. Grotesque includes absurd and bizarre elements and pierces the conventional version of reality. However; in its ability to shock or offend, grotesque helps to expose the vulnerability in human depicted via these absurd element which will be explained in detail in the present study. Australian International Academic Centre 2014-04 Article PeerReviewed Endurance, Anegbe and Wan Yahya, Wan Roselezam and Majeed, Abdulhameed A. (2014) The grotesque elements in Poe’s “Black Cat” and Scudder’s “The White Cat”. International Journal of Comparative Literature & Translation Studies, 2 (2). pp. 42-46. ISSN 2202-9451 http://www.journals.aiac.org.au/index.php/IJCLTS/article/view/312 10.7575/aiac.ijclts.v.2n.2p.42 |
spellingShingle | Endurance, Anegbe Wan Yahya, Wan Roselezam Majeed, Abdulhameed A. The grotesque elements in Poe’s “Black Cat” and Scudder’s “The White Cat” |
title | The grotesque elements in Poe’s “Black Cat” and Scudder’s “The White Cat” |
title_full | The grotesque elements in Poe’s “Black Cat” and Scudder’s “The White Cat” |
title_fullStr | The grotesque elements in Poe’s “Black Cat” and Scudder’s “The White Cat” |
title_full_unstemmed | The grotesque elements in Poe’s “Black Cat” and Scudder’s “The White Cat” |
title_short | The grotesque elements in Poe’s “Black Cat” and Scudder’s “The White Cat” |
title_sort | grotesque elements in poe s black cat and scudder s the white cat |
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