Lauren Hope Sanderson

Affiliation: University of Edinburgh

Research Areas:
Period: 19th Century Gothic, 20th Century Gothic
Gender: Female Gothic
Genres and Media: Fiction, Poetry
Creatures: Monsters, Vampires

Lauren Hope Sanderson holds an MSc in Literature and Modernity from the University of Edinburgh, where her research examines postfeminist Gothic fiction of the late twentieth century.

Email: lauren.sanderson@outlook.com

Virginie Selavy

Research Areas:
Period: 18th Century Gothic, 19th Century Gothic, 20th Century Gothic, 21st Century Gothic
Gender: Female Gothic
Genres and Media: Film and TV
Regions and Cultures: English Gothic, European Gothic, Irish Gothic
Creatures: Ghosts, Vampires

Writer, editor, journalist, filmmaker.

Email: virginieselavy@googlemail.com
Website: www.feminaridens.com

Barbara Stevenson

Research Areas:
Period: Early Modern Gothic, 18th Century Gothic, 19th Century Gothic, 20th Century Gothic
Gender: Female Gothic, Gothic Masculinity, Gothic Gender
Interdisciplinary Approaches: Folklore and Myth, Technology, Medicine and Science, Gothic Music, Spirituality and Religion
Genres and Media: Fiction, Film and TV, Games, Theatre and Performance
Regions and Cultures: Postcolonial Gothic, African Gothic, American Gothic, Antipodean Gothic, Arctic Gothic, Asian Gothic, Black Gothic, Canadian Gothic, Caribbean Gothic, Creole Gothic, English Gothic, European Gothic, Irish Gothic, Latin American Gothic, Middle-Eastern Gothic, Nordic Gothic, Scottish Gothic, Southern American Gothic, Tropical Gothic, Welsh Gothic
Creatures: Ghosts, Monsters, Vampires

Barbara Stevenson is a writer of Gothic fiction and research, living in Orkney.

Email: stevensonsbj1@aol.com

My First Encounter With the Gothic

My First Encounter With the Gothic, by Lottie Goodger

For the majority of children of my generation, cartoon villainy was the early-years introduction to the Gothic. However, I was, for a long time and no discernable reason, dead against the cinema. My first introduction to the Gothic was therefore not film, but television.

No genre or mode offered more to the fare of animated children’s television in the early noughties than the Gothic. At a time of relative global safety and prosperity, we found ourselves attracted to the safe degeneracy of animated baddies – they gave us a way to act out our desire to push the boundaries with such exaggeration that it posed no threat, real or imagined, and I loved every second of it.

Of the animated series which introduced me to the colourful possibilities of the Gothic, The Care Bears Family (1986-1988) was the first to strike a chord. Its second episode introduces Lord No Heart, the misanthropic wizard who acts as an antagonist throughout the series, and every bit the animated Goth. He even lives in a castle inside a storm cloud!

Is that a little on the nose? Perhaps, but that’s the beauty of children’s Gothic, particularly on television when settings and characters can change week by week. Animation, too, gave this series and others after it limitless possibilities to employ monstrosity and the supernatural to Gothic effect. In short, we can do away with subtlety in favour of dramatic images of isolated castles and dreams of world domination.

My early obsession did not stop there, however. Once I saw how engaging the ‘dark side’ of animated TV could be, I saw it everywhere, from Scooby-Doo (1969 – present) to Sabrina the Teenage Witch (1999).

The Gothic witch as a stock figure became a particular source of fascination for my young self. While Sabrina leaned more towards camp as an aesthetic, the Gothic really came into its own in a series which, arguably, is far more camp and ‘cosy’: My Little Pony (1986-1987).

The witch Hydia first appears in the series’ first ten episodes, a powerful woman who transgresses boundaries of this gendered world, in which its protagonists (almost all female) advance a soft-spoken, community-based femininity. Her ultimate goal is to make the world ‘dark and dreary’ to match her home and tastes, turning Hydia from a stock antagonist into a Gothic-inspired shadow in this otherwise pastel-perfect world.

Now, as an early-career researcher in the Gothic, this first introduction to what would become a professional interest has stuck with me. I can trace the writing I am now fascinated by – women’s Gothic and folk and fairy tales, as well as the literature of traditional witchcraft – to the witches and sorcerers and scoundrels of children’s television.

I was no older than five when I came across the Gothic for the first time, but even then, it caught my attention like nothing else. It remains a hugely fruitful field that speaks to a child’s sense of adventure and discovery – and a desire to be a little bit wicked.

Evan Foley

Research Areas:
Period: 21st Century Gothic
Gender: Trans Gothic
Interdisciplinary Approaches: Technology, Medicine and Science, Gothic Music, Gothic Fashion, Spirituality and Religion
Genres and Media: Virtual Gothic
Regions and Cultures: Irish Gothic, Scottish Gothic
Creatures: Ghosts, Vampires, Zombies

Email: EvanFoley@lyndhurstschools.net

Karen Graham

Affiliation: University of Strathclyde

Research Areas:
Period: 20th Century Gothic, 21st Century Gothic
Gender: Female Gothic
Interdisciplinary Approaches: Folklore and Myth, Gothic Music, Gothic Fashion
Genres and Media: Film and TV, Children and YA, Comics and Graphic Novels, Theatre and Performance
Creatures: Ghosts, Monsters, Vampires

Karen Graham has a PhD in Religious Studies from the University of Aberdeen. Her thesis focused on the form and transmission of myth in contemporary fantasy literature in the fiction of American author Gregory Maguire. Her research interests focus on the adaptation and retelling of myths in contemporary pop culture, and she is currently involved in a research project exploring the interactions between the Gothic and dance, starting with ballet. She works in an academic adjacent position at Strathclyde Business School, managing the School’s Quality Assurance and Accreditation activity.

Email: karen.graham@strath.ac.uk

Federica Palazzi

Affiliation: University of Macerata

Research Areas:
Period: 19th Century Gothic, 20th Century Gothic, 21st Century Gothic
Gender: Female Gothic
Genres and Media: Fiction, Games
Regions and Cultures: English Gothic, Irish Gothic
Creatures: Ghosts, Monsters

Federica Palazzi is an English culture teacher and PhD researcher in Gothic literature, gender, and game design, creating a digital game based on Victorian women’s ghost stories.

Email: federica.palazzibacher@gmail.com
Website: https://www.federicapalazzibacher.com/en/home/

Teresa Sorolla

Affiliation: Universitat Jaume I

Research Areas:
Period: 19th Century Gothic, 20th Century Gothic, 21st Century Gothic
Genres and Media: Arts, Fiction, Film and TV
Regions and Cultures: English Gothic, Scottish Gothic
Creatures: Ghosts, Vampires

Full Lecturer in Film Studies and Visual Culture at Universitat Jaume I (Spain)

Email: tsorolla@uji.es
Website: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2768-4169

Dennis Jackson

Research Areas:
Period: 19th Century Gothic
Gender: Trans Gothic
Interdisciplinary Approaches: Technology, Medicine and Science, Gothic Music, Gothic Fashion
Genres and Media: Film and TV
Regions and Cultures: Irish Gothic
Creatures: Monsters, Zombies

Email: david.jaques@uss.co.uk

Shaun Mclaren

Affiliation: University of Stirling

Research Areas:
Period: 20th Century Gothic, 21st Century Gothic
Gender: Gothic Masculinity
Genres and Media: Fiction, Games
Regions and Cultures: Scottish Gothic
Creatures: Monsters

Shaun Mclaren is an early career gothicist and MRes Arts and Humanities student at the University of Stirling, specialising in weird literature and nihilism.

Email: shaunmclarenwriter@gmail.com