Sipari gotici. Lo strano caso del Dr. Boaden e Mr. Lewis
Abstract
Starting from the remarkable intellectual bond linking James Boaden and Matthew
Gregory Lewis, this paper investigates the nature of the relationship that, at the end
of the eighteenth century, came to be established between the theatrical adaptations
of the most popular Gothic novels and Gothic “original” plays. The fact that most authors
adapting Gothic novels for the theatre make a show of constructing a “gothicising”
kind of drama, conveying a certain cultural and social respectability, is interpreted
here as a deliberate attempt at defusing a genre, both narrative and theatrical, that was
perceived as subversive and anti-nationalistic. In this effort towards normalization, one
can see the reflections of a question of identity that runs through the society of the time
and that goes beyond the field of literature, even while involving it.