While reading from the narrator’s perspective, the readers are concerned about the mental state of their story teller, but sometimes forget the context of the story being told. In response, most of his characters have some sort of mental illness, or eventually go mad. As a writer, Edgar Allen Poe has to create characters with depth, that add to the suspense of the story. In The Black Cat it is made apparent, that death is a common subject, but the beginning is primarily an internal struggle within the narrator. Most of Poe’s works are easily identified as gothic due to the theme of death and decay, although that is not always the theme being portrayed by the story until later in the work. Edgar Allen Poe is widely known for making some of the greatest Gothic texts, but also has very distinct characteristics throughout his, modeling after Walpole, but also creating a standard for future texts.
The Black Cat by Edgar Allen Poe uses an abundance of adjectives to set a gloomy scene, but also uses the narrator’s emotional distress and supernatural curiosity to structure the gothic tale. Novels and stories frequently revisit the same elements when creating a gothic tale, but can also use other characteristics to create the same essence of Castle of Otranto.
This text was the first novel of its kind to introduce, a suspenseful atmosphere, ancient prophecies, and metonymy of horror.
Traditional Gothic characteristics were originally exemplified by Horace Walpole’s Castle of Otranto.