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Elizabeth Bowen Critical Essay | Critical Essay by John Coates

This literature criticism consists of approximately 27 pages of analysis & critique of Elizabeth Bowen.
This section contains 7,998 words
(approx. 27 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our The Ghost Story - Critical Essay by John Coates

Critical Essay by John Coates

SOURCE: Coates, John. “The Moral Argument of Elizabeth Bowen's Ghost Stories.” Renascence: Essays on Values in Literature 52, no. 4 (summer 2000): 293-309.

In the following essay, Coates offers an overview of Bowen's moral vision as depicted in her ghost stories.

By common consent, Elizabeth Bowen was a distinguished writer of ghost stories. While fully capable of giving her readers all the usual and anticipated satisfactions of such tales, she made, and fulfilled, other, larger claims for the form. As she remarked in 1947 in a preface to Le Fanu's Uncle Silas, “Our ancestors may have had an agreeable-dreadful reflex from the idea of the Devil or a skull-headed revenant, popping in and out through a closed door: we need, to make us shiver the effluence from a damned soul” (Mulberry Tree 112). Tales of terror may always have contained an element of “moral dread” but its “refinement” in literature...
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This section contains 7,998 words
(approx. 27 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our The Ghost Story - Critical Essay by John Coates
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The Ghost Story - Critical Essay by John Coates from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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