Browse content similar to Blood for Sale: Gothic Goes Global. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!
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Gothic. | 0:00:07 | 0:00:09 | |
It began with the desire to revive something that was dead, | 0:00:09 | 0:00:12 | |
a style of medieval architecture. | 0:00:12 | 0:00:14 | |
But it grew like graveyard ivy, more sinister at every twist and turn. | 0:00:15 | 0:00:21 | |
By the mid-19th century, | 0:00:23 | 0:00:24 | |
Gothic had spread in all directions. | 0:00:24 | 0:00:27 | |
There was Gothic painting, with | 0:00:28 | 0:00:30 | |
its fears and phobias, the Gothic novel, rooted in terror and dread. | 0:00:30 | 0:00:35 | |
But what happened to the Gothic ivy as it grew out of | 0:00:36 | 0:00:40 | |
the Victorian age and into the 20th century, into our own time? | 0:00:40 | 0:00:45 | |
It proliferated. | 0:00:45 | 0:00:46 | |
British novelists, poets, film-makers, | 0:00:46 | 0:00:49 | |
so many have seized on the Gothic or been seized by it. | 0:00:49 | 0:00:53 | |
Nowadays, it's everywhere. | 0:00:53 | 0:00:55 | |
It's infected our books, films, TV, music, fashion and beyond. | 0:00:57 | 0:01:02 | |
Even technology's Gothic. There are ghosts in the machine. | 0:01:02 | 0:01:08 | |
So Gothic can't be compared to ivy any more. It's gone viral. | 0:01:08 | 0:01:12 | |
But how did it happen? | 0:01:13 | 0:01:15 | |
To understand that, there's somebody you just have to meet. | 0:01:15 | 0:01:19 | |
Count Dracula's waxen hue became | 0:01:52 | 0:01:54 | |
greenish-yellow by the contrast of his burning eyes. | 0:01:54 | 0:01:58 | |
And the red scar on the forehead showed on the pallid skin | 0:01:58 | 0:02:01 | |
like a palpitating wound. | 0:02:01 | 0:02:03 | |
"You think to baffle me, you, with your pale faces all in a row | 0:02:05 | 0:02:08 | |
"like sheep in a butcher's. | 0:02:08 | 0:02:10 | |
"You shall be sorry yet. | 0:02:10 | 0:02:12 | |
"My revenge has just begun. | 0:02:12 | 0:02:14 | |
"I spread it over centuries, and time is on my side. | 0:02:14 | 0:02:17 | |
"Your girls that you all love are mine already, | 0:02:19 | 0:02:22 | |
"and through them, you and others shall yet be mine, | 0:02:22 | 0:02:25 | |
"my creatures to do my bidding, | 0:02:25 | 0:02:28 | |
"to be my jackals when I want to feed." | 0:02:28 | 0:02:30 | |
In the world of the Gothic, all roads lead to Dracula. | 0:02:34 | 0:02:39 | |
And, in fact, I'm standing above a fictional crossroads | 0:02:39 | 0:02:42 | |
here in Purfleet in Essex. | 0:02:42 | 0:02:45 | |
The novelist Bram Stoker knew this area well and in Dracula | 0:02:45 | 0:02:49 | |
he named the vampire's Essex estate Carfax, | 0:02:49 | 0:02:53 | |
from the French "quatre faces", | 0:02:53 | 0:02:55 | |
meaning "four faces" or cardinal points of the compass. | 0:02:55 | 0:03:00 | |
And it's in this place, with its sense of four different | 0:03:00 | 0:03:03 | |
directions, that the novel moves to its conclusion. | 0:03:03 | 0:03:07 | |
Dracula has 50 boxes of Transylvanian earth - | 0:03:07 | 0:03:11 | |
its vitalising properties help to keep him alive - | 0:03:11 | 0:03:15 | |
transported to this spot from Whitby via Kings Cross. | 0:03:15 | 0:03:20 | |
So when you look down at those buildings you're | 0:03:20 | 0:03:23 | |
looking at Dracula's domain, but how did he really get here? | 0:03:23 | 0:03:27 | |
In terms of the plot, the answer's straightforward. | 0:03:33 | 0:03:36 | |
Carfax appears at the start of the novel. | 0:03:36 | 0:03:39 | |
Dracula buys the house when the unsuspecting agent, | 0:03:39 | 0:03:42 | |
Jonathan Harker, pays him a visit at his Transylvanian castle. | 0:03:42 | 0:03:46 | |
Harker shows him | 0:03:48 | 0:03:49 | |
some black-and-white photos of the place - | 0:03:49 | 0:03:52 | |
Kodaks, taken with one of the first mass-produced cameras. | 0:03:52 | 0:03:57 | |
Deal done, and Dracula has a little piece of England. | 0:03:57 | 0:04:00 | |
Beyond the storyline, what I mean when I say | 0:04:02 | 0:04:06 | |
"How did Dracula get here?" | 0:04:06 | 0:04:08 | |
is also how did Dracula get up here? | 0:04:08 | 0:04:12 | |
How did he come to enthral and fascinate us | 0:04:12 | 0:04:14 | |
in such a powerful and all-pervasive way? | 0:04:14 | 0:04:18 | |
There had been vampires before Dracula, but none like him. | 0:04:18 | 0:04:23 | |
From the point of his creation in the mid-1890s, he looks both | 0:04:23 | 0:04:27 | |
backwards and forwards. | 0:04:27 | 0:04:30 | |
Backwards to the "gloomth" of the classic 18th-century Gothic novel | 0:04:30 | 0:04:35 | |
with its dungeons and haunted castles in foreign parts | 0:04:35 | 0:04:40 | |
and forwards through the 20th century and into our own time. | 0:04:40 | 0:04:46 | |
His influence has infused our culture through a veritable | 0:04:46 | 0:04:52 | |
blood bank of further novels, | 0:04:52 | 0:04:55 | |
comics, films, TV series - you name it. | 0:04:55 | 0:05:00 | |
And I think the question is how did it happen? | 0:05:00 | 0:05:03 | |
How did this extraordinary mythical creature come to take | 0:05:03 | 0:05:07 | |
possession of our collective imagination? | 0:05:07 | 0:05:11 | |
Whitby, where Dracula lands before going on to take | 0:05:19 | 0:05:23 | |
possession of his Carfax estate. | 0:05:23 | 0:05:25 | |
But to understand the phenomenon of Dracula we need to go | 0:05:25 | 0:05:28 | |
beyond the Yorkshire town with which he's become so associated. | 0:05:28 | 0:05:32 | |
Dracula lives on - remains undead - | 0:05:34 | 0:05:37 | |
because Stoker kept his tale chillingly simple. | 0:05:37 | 0:05:40 | |
A terrible creature arrives from foreign parts. | 0:05:44 | 0:05:47 | |
A vampire, which sucks the blood of its victims, | 0:05:47 | 0:05:50 | |
each becoming a vampire in turn. | 0:05:50 | 0:05:53 | |
Dracula's purpose? | 0:05:53 | 0:05:55 | |
To travel to London, the heart of British society, | 0:05:55 | 0:05:57 | |
and infect it with the vampire virus. | 0:05:57 | 0:06:01 | |
He's elusive, difficult to catch, but that's the appeal. | 0:06:08 | 0:06:13 | |
Onto his darkness we can project any anxiety we wish. | 0:06:13 | 0:06:17 | |
He's been plague, famine, syphilis, AIDS, | 0:06:17 | 0:06:21 | |
even computer viruses. | 0:06:21 | 0:06:23 | |
But what would his first audience have made of him, | 0:06:23 | 0:06:26 | |
in the late 19th century? | 0:06:26 | 0:06:28 | |
Bram Stoker's Dracula gripped readers | 0:06:33 | 0:06:35 | |
because it held up a mirror to a society full of foreboding. | 0:06:35 | 0:06:40 | |
The novel's dark vision, of a world where there are only vampires | 0:06:40 | 0:06:44 | |
and victims, played on a real anxiety - | 0:06:44 | 0:06:47 | |
the fear that a terrible change | 0:06:47 | 0:06:49 | |
was taking place in society, | 0:06:49 | 0:06:52 | |
that the modern world really was being stalked by a monster. | 0:06:52 | 0:06:57 | |
A monster who dwelled not in a Transylvanian castle, | 0:06:57 | 0:07:01 | |
but in the citadel of the modern market. | 0:07:01 | 0:07:04 | |
Capital is dead labour which vampire-like lives only | 0:07:06 | 0:07:09 | |
by sucking living labour and lives the more the more labour it sucks. | 0:07:09 | 0:07:14 | |
30 years before Stoker wrote Dracula, the economist | 0:07:22 | 0:07:26 | |
and philosopher Karl Marx had written his own great book | 0:07:26 | 0:07:30 | |
about a blood-sucking beast. | 0:07:30 | 0:07:31 | |
Das Kapital, he called it, its subject a real-life vampire - | 0:07:33 | 0:07:37 | |
the great demon Capital, which drains a drop of the worker's blood | 0:07:37 | 0:07:41 | |
every second of the working day. | 0:07:41 | 0:07:44 | |
Marx laid bare the workings of what he called capitalism, | 0:07:45 | 0:07:48 | |
the mechanism behind its face. | 0:07:48 | 0:07:51 | |
What made the market tick? | 0:07:52 | 0:07:54 | |
The vast forces of production. | 0:07:54 | 0:07:57 | |
And what made them tick was labour, workers grinding away under | 0:07:57 | 0:08:01 | |
the heel of their capitalist masters and the tyranny of the clock. | 0:08:01 | 0:08:04 | |
He backed up his thesis with facts and figures, | 0:08:06 | 0:08:08 | |
but to get his readers' blood up Marx used the imagery of Gothic. | 0:08:08 | 0:08:13 | |
The time during which the labourer works | 0:08:16 | 0:08:19 | |
is the time during which the capitalist consumes | 0:08:19 | 0:08:22 | |
the labour-power he has purchased of him. | 0:08:22 | 0:08:25 | |
The prolongation of the working day beyond the limits of the natural day into the night | 0:08:25 | 0:08:30 | |
only slightly quenches the vampire thirst | 0:08:30 | 0:08:32 | |
for the living blood of labour. | 0:08:32 | 0:08:34 | |
Time is money, blood money. | 0:08:38 | 0:08:40 | |
Capitalism, as we think of it thanks to him, is presented by Marx | 0:08:41 | 0:08:45 | |
as predatory and ghoulish - red in spooky tooth and claw. | 0:08:45 | 0:08:50 | |
For Marx, the wiles of the vampire were at work | 0:08:52 | 0:08:55 | |
everywhere in the modern world. | 0:08:55 | 0:08:57 | |
Not just at the point of production, workers drained of blood, | 0:08:58 | 0:09:02 | |
but also at the point of consumption, | 0:09:02 | 0:09:05 | |
where purchasers were beguiled | 0:09:05 | 0:09:08 | |
by the new advertising and window displays of the 19th century. | 0:09:08 | 0:09:12 | |
Marx saw shopping as an unsettling experience, in which we're | 0:09:14 | 0:09:19 | |
mesmerised by commerce, just like victims seduced by a vampire. | 0:09:19 | 0:09:24 | |
Norman Mailer once said that Das Kapital is a great novel. | 0:09:26 | 0:09:30 | |
What he forgot to add is that it's a Gothic novel. | 0:09:30 | 0:09:34 | |
Because if Karl Marx's capitalists are the new vampiric villains | 0:09:34 | 0:09:39 | |
sucking the blood of the workforce, what are the consumers? | 0:09:39 | 0:09:44 | |
In Marx's view, they are the deluded devotees of a new sect. | 0:09:44 | 0:09:49 | |
When he looked at the shop window fronts of Victorian London | 0:09:49 | 0:09:53 | |
he didn't see fine porcelain, fob watches, beautiful furniture. | 0:09:53 | 0:09:58 | |
He saw a row of false idols beguiling | 0:09:58 | 0:10:02 | |
and enchanting people into purchasing them. | 0:10:02 | 0:10:05 | |
That's why he said "The commodity is a fetish". | 0:10:05 | 0:10:10 | |
This was voodoo economics. | 0:10:10 | 0:10:12 | |
For all its Gothic elements, Das Kapital was still | 0:10:17 | 0:10:20 | |
a dense theoretical study written by a German emigre. | 0:10:20 | 0:10:23 | |
Is that why its importance to British Gothic has gone unnoticed? | 0:10:25 | 0:10:29 | |
But Gothic without Marx is like Dracula without blood. | 0:10:30 | 0:10:34 | |
Bram Stoker never read Das Kapital, but it certainly | 0:10:34 | 0:10:38 | |
contributed to the fin-de-siecle mood that made Dracula so powerful. | 0:10:38 | 0:10:43 | |
It was Marx who'd first raised the vampire from mere horror to | 0:10:45 | 0:10:49 | |
modern myth. | 0:10:49 | 0:10:51 | |
He'd seeded the sinister thought that there was something | 0:10:51 | 0:10:55 | |
essentially vampiric about the modern world. | 0:10:55 | 0:10:58 | |
Marx certainly inspired the great optimist of late Victorian Gothic - | 0:11:00 | 0:11:04 | |
a man who was no writer of dark fantasy, | 0:11:04 | 0:11:07 | |
but the very opposite. | 0:11:07 | 0:11:09 | |
He was an idealist, an artist and designer who hoped | 0:11:09 | 0:11:13 | |
he could redeem the world of commerce from within. | 0:11:13 | 0:11:16 | |
Here we are. Number 449 Oxford Street. | 0:11:18 | 0:11:23 | |
This is where Morris and Company used to display their commodities. | 0:11:23 | 0:11:28 | |
The wallpaper and designs of William Morris, founder of | 0:11:28 | 0:11:33 | |
the Arts and Crafts movement, | 0:11:33 | 0:11:35 | |
associate member of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, | 0:11:35 | 0:11:37 | |
supporter of the Gothic Revival in architecture, | 0:11:37 | 0:11:41 | |
visionary poet and pamphleteer. | 0:11:41 | 0:11:44 | |
Now the idea that there was a kinship between Karl Marx and | 0:11:44 | 0:11:49 | |
Gothic Revivalists like Morris | 0:11:49 | 0:11:51 | |
wouldn't have surprised him in the slightest | 0:11:51 | 0:11:54 | |
because he was one of the first Englishmen to read Das Kapital. | 0:11:54 | 0:11:58 | |
He had it in a French copy. | 0:11:58 | 0:12:00 | |
He designed his own gilt-edged cover for it. | 0:12:00 | 0:12:02 | |
Morris, like Marx, was a revolutionary socialist | 0:12:04 | 0:12:07 | |
and he wanted to change the world, to halt the advance of | 0:12:07 | 0:12:12 | |
this newly named beast - "consumer capitalism". | 0:12:12 | 0:12:16 | |
To drive a stake through its heart. | 0:12:16 | 0:12:19 | |
As if anyone could stop all of this. | 0:12:19 | 0:12:21 | |
But Morris had a go, and one of his strategies was fighting | 0:12:25 | 0:12:29 | |
capitalist quantity, the endless conveyor belt of tatty | 0:12:29 | 0:12:33 | |
factory commodities, with the quality of his own goods, | 0:12:33 | 0:12:37 | |
individually crafted in the workshop. | 0:12:37 | 0:12:40 | |
Of course, they were far too expensive for ordinary | 0:12:40 | 0:12:43 | |
working people - the very people Morris wanted to empower. | 0:12:43 | 0:12:47 | |
But that is just one of the hazards of being a revolutionary. | 0:12:47 | 0:12:51 | |
You keep hitting contradictions. | 0:12:51 | 0:12:53 | |
You can't fault Morris's idealism, though. | 0:12:54 | 0:12:57 | |
Here he was in his twilight years, | 0:12:57 | 0:12:58 | |
miles away from the cliched view of him as an artist in rural retreat, | 0:12:58 | 0:13:04 | |
living in West London to be close to the action. | 0:13:04 | 0:13:07 | |
As Morris grew older he became more political | 0:13:09 | 0:13:12 | |
and he spent more time in London. | 0:13:12 | 0:13:14 | |
He had become a member of the Social Democratic Federation | 0:13:14 | 0:13:19 | |
but it wasn't radical enough for him. | 0:13:19 | 0:13:21 | |
So, he co-founded the new, more militant Socialist League. | 0:13:21 | 0:13:27 | |
Eleanor Marx, Karl's daughter, was one of the signatories | 0:13:27 | 0:13:30 | |
and Morris even set up its Hammersmith branch. | 0:13:30 | 0:13:34 | |
He lobbied, he made speeches and he went to rallies which were | 0:13:34 | 0:13:40 | |
met with a level of police brutality that appalled him. | 0:13:40 | 0:13:44 | |
Now, this was the house, the house where Morris and his workers, | 0:13:44 | 0:13:50 | |
freed from the vampiric clutches of capitalism, | 0:13:50 | 0:13:55 | |
created their carpets. | 0:13:55 | 0:13:57 | |
It was also their printing press | 0:13:57 | 0:13:59 | |
and where they held their political meetings. | 0:13:59 | 0:14:01 | |
Now, what were the foundation stones | 0:14:01 | 0:14:03 | |
of Morris's revolutionary socialist politics? | 0:14:03 | 0:14:07 | |
Two books - Marx's Das Kapital, of course, | 0:14:07 | 0:14:10 | |
but also a text he had read in his youth and which he believed in | 0:14:10 | 0:14:15 | |
so passionately that he personally re-printed it in this house. | 0:14:15 | 0:14:19 | |
The book? John Ruskin, The Nature Of Gothic. | 0:14:20 | 0:14:24 | |
John Ruskin was the most influential art critic | 0:14:27 | 0:14:30 | |
of the 19th century, but he was also a critic | 0:14:30 | 0:14:33 | |
of society, arguing that the Industrial Revolution was a blight. | 0:14:33 | 0:14:38 | |
Ruskin writing about the Gothic, printed by William Morris. | 0:14:40 | 0:14:47 | |
And I love the way they've placed the book for me | 0:14:47 | 0:14:50 | |
here at Kelmscott House on a little cushion. | 0:14:50 | 0:14:54 | |
It's almost as if it's asleep. So let's wake it up. | 0:14:54 | 0:14:57 | |
Beautiful thing. | 0:15:01 | 0:15:03 | |
So this really is an absolutely mint edition. | 0:15:04 | 0:15:07 | |
But it's actually a book with, I think, a very modern message and | 0:15:07 | 0:15:12 | |
it certainly would have seemed very modern to William Morris. | 0:15:12 | 0:15:16 | |
Here he is railing against modern factory production. | 0:15:16 | 0:15:21 | |
In particular, the production of glass beads. He says, | 0:15:21 | 0:15:24 | |
"Glass beads are utterly unnecessary. | 0:15:24 | 0:15:26 | |
"They are formed by drawing out the glass into rods, | 0:15:26 | 0:15:29 | |
"the rods are chopped up into fragments of the size of beads | 0:15:29 | 0:15:32 | |
"by the human hand. | 0:15:32 | 0:15:33 | |
"The men who chop up the rods sit at their work all day, their hands | 0:15:33 | 0:15:36 | |
"vibrating with a perpetual and exquisitely timed palsy. | 0:15:36 | 0:15:41 | |
"The beads dropping beneath their vibration like hail." C-c-c-r-r-r... | 0:15:41 | 0:15:46 | |
You can hear it - what a wonderful description | 0:15:46 | 0:15:49 | |
of a horrible factory job, | 0:15:49 | 0:15:51 | |
and Ruskin goes on to say to his well-bred readership, | 0:15:51 | 0:15:55 | |
"Every young lady therefore who buys glass beads | 0:15:55 | 0:15:58 | |
"is engaged in the slave trade." | 0:15:58 | 0:16:00 | |
Strong words. | 0:16:02 | 0:16:03 | |
Why was Morris so keen to republish those words, | 0:16:08 | 0:16:11 | |
40 years after they had been written? | 0:16:11 | 0:16:14 | |
Partly because Ruskin's views chimed so well with those of Karl Marx. | 0:16:14 | 0:16:20 | |
But it was also because Morris was drawn to | 0:16:20 | 0:16:22 | |
Ruskin's aesthetic theories. | 0:16:22 | 0:16:24 | |
To fight the blood-sucking beast of capitalism, | 0:16:25 | 0:16:28 | |
Morris turned to his hero's core beliefs. | 0:16:28 | 0:16:31 | |
Ruskin had preached for a return to the Christian values | 0:16:31 | 0:16:34 | |
of the Middle Ages, and he'd argued that the spirituality | 0:16:34 | 0:16:37 | |
and love which medieval craftsmen had brought to their work | 0:16:37 | 0:16:40 | |
must somehow be recovered in the modern world. | 0:16:40 | 0:16:43 | |
Morris tried to turn Ruskin's ideas about art and craft | 0:16:45 | 0:16:48 | |
into a reality - | 0:16:48 | 0:16:50 | |
and hoped that one day everybody would live in surroundings | 0:16:50 | 0:16:53 | |
of handcrafted beauty. | 0:16:53 | 0:16:56 | |
Naive? | 0:16:56 | 0:16:57 | |
Maybe, but there's still one place where you can see | 0:16:57 | 0:17:00 | |
the beauty of the idea. | 0:17:00 | 0:17:02 | |
Welcome to Number Seven Hammersmith Terrace. | 0:17:05 | 0:17:08 | |
Now, no original Morris interiors survive at Kelmscott House, which is | 0:17:09 | 0:17:14 | |
just around the corner, but here they do, | 0:17:14 | 0:17:18 | |
and it's quite something. | 0:17:18 | 0:17:20 | |
This, this was once the home of Emery Walker, who was a close | 0:17:21 | 0:17:26 | |
friend of William Morris. | 0:17:26 | 0:17:28 | |
They collaborated on Morris's publishing ventures - | 0:17:28 | 0:17:32 | |
Walker was a typographer himself - | 0:17:32 | 0:17:34 | |
and they were also comrades, fellow members of the Socialist League | 0:17:34 | 0:17:38 | |
and you can feel that sense of their close attachment to one another | 0:17:38 | 0:17:41 | |
in this house, which, extraordinarily, has remained | 0:17:41 | 0:17:45 | |
almost untouched since Walker lived here 100 years ago. | 0:17:45 | 0:17:49 | |
Every inch is decorated with William Morris fabrics, William Morris | 0:17:49 | 0:17:54 | |
wallpapers, ceramics, even the sconce is a William Morris design. | 0:17:54 | 0:17:59 | |
It's almost uncanny, you expect Morris to call up | 0:17:59 | 0:18:04 | |
on the phone at any minute or walk through the door | 0:18:04 | 0:18:07 | |
and his spirit does still haunt this place. | 0:18:07 | 0:18:10 | |
He's there, present in the ghostly form of photographs. | 0:18:10 | 0:18:14 | |
It's just wonderful. | 0:18:14 | 0:18:15 | |
Wonderful too the Gothic Revival on a larger scale, | 0:18:26 | 0:18:29 | |
and equally poignant. | 0:18:29 | 0:18:31 | |
Keble College, Oxford, founded in 1870, | 0:18:32 | 0:18:35 | |
designed by William Butterfield, | 0:18:35 | 0:18:37 | |
is its last gasp, captured in patterns of polychrome stone. | 0:18:37 | 0:18:41 | |
Built according to Ruskin's blueprint for the true Gothic style, | 0:18:43 | 0:18:47 | |
it also looked back to Pugin's early Victorian dream | 0:18:47 | 0:18:51 | |
of refashioning all of Britain in the image of a medieval town. | 0:18:51 | 0:18:55 | |
But this was a final flowering of a style soon to be cut off | 0:18:56 | 0:19:00 | |
by the onslaught of the modern, the pragmatic, the utilitarian. | 0:19:00 | 0:19:05 | |
Elaborate detail? Waste of time and money. | 0:19:05 | 0:19:09 | |
Late Victorian Gothic might flourish a veritable forest | 0:19:09 | 0:19:13 | |
of crosses at its vampire enemy. | 0:19:13 | 0:19:15 | |
But the vampire, irresistible, carried on regardless. | 0:19:15 | 0:19:20 | |
In the middle of the 19th century, as a young man, | 0:19:25 | 0:19:28 | |
Morris had singled out the train as a shrieking abomination, | 0:19:28 | 0:19:32 | |
the symbol of all that was bad about industrialisation and the machine. | 0:19:32 | 0:19:36 | |
By the end of the century the train had certainly not stopped | 0:19:38 | 0:19:41 | |
shrieking, and the steam engine couldn't be halted. | 0:19:41 | 0:19:45 | |
Even entertainment was becoming industrialised. | 0:19:45 | 0:19:48 | |
Machines were becoming a source of pleasure. | 0:19:48 | 0:19:51 | |
William Morris was left behind, isolated, | 0:19:51 | 0:19:55 | |
a prophet in the wilderness. | 0:19:55 | 0:19:57 | |
One man's wilderness is another's paradise - | 0:19:58 | 0:20:02 | |
even a man with the same name. | 0:20:02 | 0:20:04 | |
By a strange quirk, in 1913, barely 15 years after William Morris's | 0:20:04 | 0:20:09 | |
death, another William Morris, the car manufacturer, | 0:20:09 | 0:20:14 | |
started up his factory in Cowley, on the outskirts of Oxford. | 0:20:14 | 0:20:18 | |
City of dreaming spires, stronghold of the Gothic Revival. | 0:20:19 | 0:20:23 | |
Adding to the irony, the first William Morris had been a student | 0:20:23 | 0:20:27 | |
here and later returned to lecture on the evils of the modern world. | 0:20:27 | 0:20:32 | |
The world doesn't come much more modern than this. | 0:20:36 | 0:20:39 | |
The second William Morris introduced the very latest production | 0:20:39 | 0:20:43 | |
techniques to early 20th-century Britain, | 0:20:43 | 0:20:45 | |
namely the assembly line used by the American Henry Ford | 0:20:45 | 0:20:49 | |
in his Detroit car plants. | 0:20:49 | 0:20:52 | |
The same division of labour that had horrified Ruskin had now | 0:20:52 | 0:20:55 | |
intensified, each worker given a single task to perform | 0:20:55 | 0:21:00 | |
again and again. | 0:21:00 | 0:21:01 | |
100 years later, and automation | 0:21:06 | 0:21:08 | |
has reached its logical conclusion, robots doing most of the work. | 0:21:08 | 0:21:13 | |
Seen through Gothic eyes, it's a nightmare come to pass. | 0:21:13 | 0:21:16 | |
Human beings replaced by Frankenstein monsters. | 0:21:17 | 0:21:21 | |
Or by mechanised Draculas, with soldering-iron fangs. | 0:21:21 | 0:21:24 | |
Is this what the second William Morris's workforce | 0:21:26 | 0:21:29 | |
looks like once Marx's great vampire | 0:21:29 | 0:21:31 | |
has drunk all the blood - an army of the living dead, | 0:21:31 | 0:21:36 | |
capable of working 24 hours a day? | 0:21:36 | 0:21:38 | |
It looks different, but it's really just Fordism brought up-to-date. | 0:21:39 | 0:21:43 | |
Robots and new technology aside, I think William Morris would | 0:21:46 | 0:21:49 | |
probably have felt very at home here. | 0:21:49 | 0:21:52 | |
He certainly would have recognised this modern chart | 0:21:52 | 0:21:56 | |
following the progress of the car through the production line | 0:21:56 | 0:21:59 | |
because, after all, it's very similar to the blueprints he'd | 0:21:59 | 0:22:02 | |
introduced all the way back in 1913. | 0:22:02 | 0:22:05 | |
Henry Ford's methods brought to Britain. | 0:22:05 | 0:22:08 | |
In those days it was 20 cars a week, now it's 900 a day, | 0:22:08 | 0:22:12 | |
and there's another difference too - the modern consumer can | 0:22:12 | 0:22:17 | |
choose the car any colour he likes, any type of wheel, the upholstery. | 0:22:17 | 0:22:23 | |
You name it, it's your car to design. | 0:22:23 | 0:22:25 | |
I wonder what the other William Morris might have made of that. | 0:22:26 | 0:22:29 | |
Would he have seen it as a good thing, | 0:22:32 | 0:22:33 | |
a little bit of power given back to the individual? | 0:22:33 | 0:22:36 | |
Or just another of the vampire's traps? | 0:22:37 | 0:22:40 | |
When Morris looked at the modern world he could only see | 0:22:42 | 0:22:45 | |
a relentless juggernaut, a huge, impersonal machine. | 0:22:45 | 0:22:49 | |
But factories and trains weren't the whole story. | 0:22:51 | 0:22:54 | |
The industry of the late 19th century brought other things | 0:22:54 | 0:22:57 | |
in its wake too - | 0:22:57 | 0:22:59 | |
more personal, almost human technologies were being developed, | 0:22:59 | 0:23:03 | |
what would come to be known as the new media. | 0:23:03 | 0:23:06 | |
They were destined to play a leading part in the story of Gothic, | 0:23:08 | 0:23:12 | |
and they should have been on Morris's radar. | 0:23:12 | 0:23:14 | |
Before he bought it, | 0:23:14 | 0:23:15 | |
his home in Hammersmith was where the telegraph had been invented. | 0:23:15 | 0:23:19 | |
But these new phenomena were certainly on Bram Stoker's radar. | 0:23:20 | 0:23:24 | |
In fact, they haunt his famous novel Dracula | 0:23:24 | 0:23:27 | |
every bit as much as the figure of the vampire. | 0:23:27 | 0:23:30 | |
You might expect Bram Stoker's Dracula | 0:23:41 | 0:23:44 | |
to be all about ruined abbeys | 0:23:44 | 0:23:46 | |
and castles, vampires and blood, | 0:23:46 | 0:23:49 | |
but in fact the novel is obsessively full of references to | 0:23:49 | 0:23:54 | |
the new technology, the new media of the late 19th century. | 0:23:54 | 0:23:58 | |
The telephone, the typewriter, the phonograph and the Kodak camera. | 0:23:58 | 0:24:03 | |
The very form of the novel draws on the possibilities of new technology. | 0:24:08 | 0:24:13 | |
Its narrative is composed from several characters' | 0:24:14 | 0:24:17 | |
voices or rather their raw materials, their diaries, | 0:24:17 | 0:24:21 | |
their journals, their letters, newspaper cuttings. | 0:24:21 | 0:24:26 | |
And it's the typewriter which Bram Stoker used to write the novel, | 0:24:26 | 0:24:30 | |
but IN the novel, Mina Harker's typewriter, | 0:24:30 | 0:24:34 | |
with its many-fanged mouth, its metal teeth, | 0:24:34 | 0:24:38 | |
ingests all this material and records it as print on paper. | 0:24:38 | 0:24:43 | |
Typing becomes a weapon, | 0:24:49 | 0:24:50 | |
the resulting documentation used to track Dracula to his lair. | 0:24:50 | 0:24:54 | |
The sharing and circulation of evidence is what brings him down. | 0:24:54 | 0:24:59 | |
So copying, and shortcuts to copying, like shorthand, | 0:25:00 | 0:25:05 | |
are an essential part of the plot. | 0:25:05 | 0:25:07 | |
This is where the manifold comes in, | 0:25:07 | 0:25:09 | |
enabling the typewriter to produce carbon copies. | 0:25:09 | 0:25:14 | |
Jonathan Harker's wife, Mina, uses it to churn out and duplicate | 0:25:14 | 0:25:18 | |
so much information she's virtually a one-woman printing press. | 0:25:18 | 0:25:22 | |
But it's the psychiatrist Dr Seward who takes copying to an extreme. | 0:25:24 | 0:25:30 | |
His journal relates the escape of Renfield, | 0:25:30 | 0:25:33 | |
the lunatic - in fact he's a vampire - who leaps over the walls | 0:25:33 | 0:25:37 | |
of his asylum in Purfleet, ominously close to Dracula's Carfax estate. | 0:25:37 | 0:25:42 | |
The doctor's observations take the form of a voice recording onto | 0:25:45 | 0:25:49 | |
the wax cylinder of a phonograph. | 0:25:49 | 0:25:52 | |
Then he has Mina transcribe it, | 0:25:53 | 0:25:55 | |
a process which she in turn writes up in her personal journal. | 0:25:55 | 0:25:59 | |
Mina Harker's journal, 29 September. | 0:26:09 | 0:26:11 | |
After dinner I came with Dr Seward to his study. | 0:26:13 | 0:26:16 | |
He brought back the phonograph from my room, and I took my typewriter. | 0:26:16 | 0:26:21 | |
He placed me in a comfortable chair, and arranged the phonograph | 0:26:21 | 0:26:24 | |
so that I could touch it without getting up, | 0:26:24 | 0:26:25 | |
and showed me how to stop it in case I should want to pause. | 0:26:25 | 0:26:29 | |
Then he very thoughtfully took a chair, with his back to me, | 0:26:29 | 0:26:33 | |
so that I might be as free as possible, and began to read. | 0:26:33 | 0:26:36 | |
I put the forked metal to my ears and listened. | 0:26:37 | 0:26:40 | |
Bram Stoker's description reminds me | 0:26:44 | 0:26:47 | |
of a seance or a session in psychoanalysis. | 0:26:47 | 0:26:50 | |
This is typing beyond the call of duty for a woman who is part of | 0:26:50 | 0:26:54 | |
a whole new class of female worker, the secretary or stenographer. | 0:26:54 | 0:27:00 | |
A little later on, Mina says that she is typing out the words | 0:27:00 | 0:27:03 | |
precisely so that other people won't have to listen to | 0:27:03 | 0:27:07 | |
the machine's cruel recording of the anguish in Dr Seward's voice, | 0:27:07 | 0:27:12 | |
like a soul crying out to Almighty God. | 0:27:12 | 0:27:16 | |
She is the secretary in touch with the dark or other side. | 0:27:16 | 0:27:20 | |
A spiritualist medium using the new medium or media | 0:27:20 | 0:27:25 | |
of the phonograph and the typewriter. | 0:27:25 | 0:27:27 | |
What's the subtext of all this, as they say? | 0:27:30 | 0:27:34 | |
The new technology might be used to fight the vampire, | 0:27:34 | 0:27:38 | |
but at the same time it can be read as another version | 0:27:38 | 0:27:40 | |
of the vampire virus - multiplying as it feeds | 0:27:40 | 0:27:45 | |
not on blood but on the information confided to the QWERTYUIOP keys | 0:27:45 | 0:27:49 | |
of the typewriter or spoken into the machine. | 0:27:49 | 0:27:52 | |
Stoker implies that it's not just our facts, information, | 0:27:56 | 0:28:00 | |
but a bit of us that's being copied in the process, | 0:28:00 | 0:28:03 | |
and that the modern age makes | 0:28:03 | 0:28:05 | |
vampires us of all, ghosts who live on, | 0:28:05 | 0:28:09 | |
in the phonograph or the photograph or in the moving picture. | 0:28:09 | 0:28:14 | |
Perhaps it's no wonder that Dracula's image, | 0:28:15 | 0:28:18 | |
which can never be seen in a mirror, | 0:28:18 | 0:28:20 | |
would multiply in the darkness of the auditorium. | 0:28:20 | 0:28:23 | |
The most thrilling new technology of the 1890s was cinema, which | 0:28:25 | 0:28:30 | |
started out as a fairground sideshow | 0:28:30 | 0:28:32 | |
but soon moved into cinemas like this, The Granada in Tooting, | 0:28:32 | 0:28:38 | |
less picture palace than movie cathedral, | 0:28:38 | 0:28:41 | |
complete with Gothic decoration. | 0:28:41 | 0:28:44 | |
Now, there's no film in Bram Stoker's Dracula | 0:28:44 | 0:28:48 | |
apart from that in the Kodak stills camera used by Jonathan Harker, | 0:28:48 | 0:28:53 | |
but the book would lend itself to countless adaptations for | 0:28:53 | 0:28:56 | |
the big screen, a multitude of spin-offs, | 0:28:56 | 0:28:59 | |
and a fair number of spoofs. | 0:28:59 | 0:29:01 | |
More than any other medium it was cinema that propelled | 0:29:01 | 0:29:05 | |
Gothic around the globe. | 0:29:05 | 0:29:07 | |
The genre was already well-established by 1931, | 0:29:13 | 0:29:16 | |
when Bela Lugosi played Dracula. | 0:29:16 | 0:29:18 | |
The floodgates had been opened nearly a decade before with | 0:29:19 | 0:29:23 | |
Nosferatu, which, much to the chagrin of the Bram Stoker estate, | 0:29:23 | 0:29:27 | |
did not acknowledge its literary source. | 0:29:27 | 0:29:30 | |
It's also as if the property had been whipped from under | 0:29:32 | 0:29:35 | |
the nose of the British film industry. | 0:29:35 | 0:29:38 | |
But that was about to change. | 0:29:38 | 0:29:40 | |
Watching the director of Nosferatu, FW Murnau, at work on his next | 0:29:40 | 0:29:45 | |
picture in the Bioskop-Atelier studios in Potsdam was | 0:29:45 | 0:29:49 | |
the young Alfred Hitchcock. | 0:29:49 | 0:29:51 | |
The lessons he learned in Germany he would bring home to | 0:29:53 | 0:29:57 | |
Gainsborough Studios in Islington, | 0:29:57 | 0:29:59 | |
where he directed The Lodger in 1927. | 0:29:59 | 0:30:02 | |
This "Story of the London Fog", as it was called, | 0:30:04 | 0:30:07 | |
was about the Avenger, | 0:30:07 | 0:30:09 | |
a serial killer in the mould of Jack the Ripper, whose bloody true | 0:30:09 | 0:30:12 | |
crimes Bram Stoker acknowledged as an influence on Dracula. | 0:30:12 | 0:30:16 | |
The chief suspect in the film is Jonathan Drew, | 0:30:17 | 0:30:20 | |
played by Ivor Novello, and he makes an entry out of the London fog | 0:30:20 | 0:30:24 | |
worthy of Dracula emerging from the mists of Transylvania. | 0:30:24 | 0:30:28 | |
SCREAMING | 0:30:29 | 0:30:31 | |
Is there something about the disembodied nature of | 0:30:33 | 0:30:36 | |
the film image that lends itself to Gothic? | 0:30:36 | 0:30:40 | |
I'd say that there is. | 0:30:41 | 0:30:42 | |
In fact, I'd argue that the cinema is the ultimate Gothic | 0:30:42 | 0:30:46 | |
haunted house because what does it present you with? | 0:30:46 | 0:30:49 | |
Apparitions, images of people who aren't really there | 0:30:49 | 0:30:54 | |
and if you're watching an old film the fact is that | 0:30:54 | 0:30:57 | |
you are watching people who are dead but they seem alive. | 0:30:57 | 0:31:02 | |
You are communing with ghosts. | 0:31:02 | 0:31:04 | |
SCREAMING | 0:31:07 | 0:31:09 | |
The film industry in Britain never established itself to | 0:31:15 | 0:31:18 | |
the commercial and artistic degree which it did in Germany, France, | 0:31:18 | 0:31:21 | |
Italy and, of course, America. | 0:31:21 | 0:31:24 | |
Hitchcock was soon off to Hollywood, taking with him | 0:31:25 | 0:31:27 | |
his predilection for murder and his penchant for the Gothic. | 0:31:27 | 0:31:31 | |
It's certainly there in the dream house of Manderley in Rebecca, | 0:31:32 | 0:31:36 | |
and the house of Oedipal necrophile horrors in Psycho. | 0:31:36 | 0:31:40 | |
For the British film industry, though, | 0:31:41 | 0:31:43 | |
there'd be a sting in the tail, a return of the repressed. | 0:31:43 | 0:31:47 | |
Come with us if you dare, | 0:31:51 | 0:31:52 | |
into a twilight world of unspeakable horror. | 0:31:52 | 0:31:54 | |
You must die. Everybody must die! | 0:31:56 | 0:31:58 | |
SCREAMING | 0:31:58 | 0:31:59 | |
DRAMATIC FILM MUSIC CONTINUES | 0:32:07 | 0:32:09 | |
Beware the vampire lovers. | 0:32:14 | 0:32:15 | |
You can't keep a good vampire down. | 0:32:22 | 0:32:24 | |
This is Oakley Court Hotel, once owned by | 0:32:24 | 0:32:28 | |
the 19th-century Liberal politician Lord Otto Fitzgerald. | 0:32:28 | 0:32:32 | |
During the 1960s it was used as a set for some of the most | 0:32:33 | 0:32:36 | |
commercially successful British films ever made. | 0:32:36 | 0:32:40 | |
Hard to believe now, but once these very walls dripped with blood. | 0:32:40 | 0:32:47 | |
SHE SCREAMS | 0:32:51 | 0:32:53 | |
Conveniently, Oakley Court's just a few hundred yards | 0:33:09 | 0:33:12 | |
from the studio which made some of its films there - Hammer Horror. | 0:33:12 | 0:33:17 | |
Now, Hammer closed down in 1979 and the studio hasn't been used | 0:33:17 | 0:33:21 | |
since 2010. | 0:33:21 | 0:33:23 | |
These days it's closed up, it's in private hands, but how | 0:33:23 | 0:33:26 | |
appropriate that Britain's most famous makers of horror films should | 0:33:26 | 0:33:30 | |
have worked out of an 18th-century Gothic-style mansion, like a piece | 0:33:30 | 0:33:35 | |
of Strawberry Hill, Horace Walpole's Gothic house, blown upriver. | 0:33:35 | 0:33:41 | |
But I'm headed in the opposite direction. I'm going east. | 0:33:41 | 0:33:44 | |
Dracula's afterlife in the cinema is a well-known part of his story, | 0:33:49 | 0:33:54 | |
the story of Gothic. | 0:33:54 | 0:33:55 | |
But the Gothic has many tributaries, irrigating | 0:33:55 | 0:33:59 | |
the hinterlands of the British imagination. | 0:33:59 | 0:34:02 | |
And never more so than | 0:34:02 | 0:34:04 | |
with Joseph Conrad's Heart Of Darkness, | 0:34:04 | 0:34:07 | |
published in 1899, just two years after Dracula. | 0:34:07 | 0:34:11 | |
It tells the tale of the evil Kurtz, | 0:34:11 | 0:34:14 | |
a trader in African ivory. | 0:34:14 | 0:34:16 | |
With his foreign-sounding name, his ability to stay | 0:34:16 | 0:34:19 | |
one step ahead, and his bloodthirsty nature - | 0:34:19 | 0:34:21 | |
well, does that remind you of anyone? | 0:34:21 | 0:34:24 | |
In chasing Kurtz's Dracula-like shadow, | 0:34:25 | 0:34:28 | |
the novel builds up a picture of the horrors wrought upon | 0:34:28 | 0:34:31 | |
Africa by Europeans along the banks of the Congo. | 0:34:31 | 0:34:35 | |
It might be a deeper, darker river than the Thames, | 0:34:35 | 0:34:37 | |
and one capable of swallowing it whole, | 0:34:37 | 0:34:40 | |
but it's the British river, as gateway to Empire | 0:34:40 | 0:34:43 | |
and the carve-up of Africa, which is the real villain of the piece. | 0:34:43 | 0:34:47 | |
In Heart Of Darkness, the Empire comes home to roost, | 0:34:49 | 0:34:53 | |
to London and the Thames estuary. | 0:34:53 | 0:34:56 | |
On the first page of the novel, Conrad describes the sky above | 0:34:56 | 0:35:00 | |
this reach as "dark, condensed to a mournful gloom, brooding motionless | 0:35:00 | 0:35:07 | |
"over the greatest town on Earth." | 0:35:07 | 0:35:10 | |
And then Charles Marlow begins his story | 0:35:10 | 0:35:13 | |
about the plunder of African ivory, telling it to the assembled company | 0:35:13 | 0:35:18 | |
of a boat called The Nelly, moored right here, just where | 0:35:18 | 0:35:24 | |
Conrad himself in real life moored his own boat, also named The Nelly. | 0:35:24 | 0:35:29 | |
There's a strong sense in Heart Of Darkness that | 0:35:30 | 0:35:34 | |
although it was the Belgians who first exploited | 0:35:34 | 0:35:37 | |
and colonised the Congo, we Europeans are all in it together. | 0:35:37 | 0:35:43 | |
We are all responsible for the atrocities of Empire. | 0:35:43 | 0:35:46 | |
The enslavement of millions of Africans was one of the great | 0:35:50 | 0:35:53 | |
historic crimes against humanity. | 0:35:53 | 0:35:55 | |
The point's brought home by Conrad's narrator, | 0:35:57 | 0:36:00 | |
Marlow, with a dark little fantasy. | 0:36:00 | 0:36:02 | |
Having described the actual abandoned dwellings | 0:36:03 | 0:36:06 | |
of Africans fleeing slavery, he then imagines the reverse - | 0:36:06 | 0:36:11 | |
black slavers coming here and rounding up the English. | 0:36:11 | 0:36:15 | |
A solitude, a solitude, nobody, not a hut. | 0:36:17 | 0:36:21 | |
The population had cleared out a long time ago. | 0:36:22 | 0:36:25 | |
Well, if a lot of mysterious niggers armed with all kinds | 0:36:26 | 0:36:30 | |
of fearful weapons suddenly took to | 0:36:30 | 0:36:31 | |
travelling on the road between Deal and Gravesend, catching | 0:36:31 | 0:36:35 | |
the yokels right and left to carry heavy loads for them, I fancy | 0:36:35 | 0:36:39 | |
every farm and cottage thereabouts would get empty very soon. | 0:36:39 | 0:36:42 | |
Conrad is widely seen as part of the canon in the great | 0:36:47 | 0:36:52 | |
tradition of the English novel, | 0:36:52 | 0:36:54 | |
but, like Dickens, he was a writer who drew deeply on the Gothic. | 0:36:54 | 0:36:58 | |
He understood that it wasn't merely a genre. | 0:36:58 | 0:37:01 | |
It could be a way of seeing, a way of thinking, | 0:37:01 | 0:37:05 | |
and in Heart Of Darkness he plunges the reader | 0:37:05 | 0:37:08 | |
into a labyrinth, at the centre of which lies a terrible secret. | 0:37:08 | 0:37:13 | |
What could be more Gothic than that? | 0:37:13 | 0:37:15 | |
And the whole tale is spoken - it comes | 0:37:16 | 0:37:20 | |
out of the mouth of a haunted man like a spell or an incantation. | 0:37:20 | 0:37:25 | |
Marlow is a mesmerising, magical narrator, | 0:37:32 | 0:37:35 | |
though he conjures with hideous images. | 0:37:35 | 0:37:38 | |
On the riverbank settlement that is his ultimate destination | 0:37:38 | 0:37:41 | |
he encounters the handiwork of Kurtz, | 0:37:41 | 0:37:44 | |
the enigmatic European trader, who has been applying his "philosophy" | 0:37:44 | 0:37:49 | |
of "exterminate all the brutes". | 0:37:49 | 0:37:51 | |
There was no enclosure or fence of any kind, but there had been | 0:37:55 | 0:37:58 | |
one apparently, for near the house half-a-dozen slim posts | 0:37:58 | 0:38:01 | |
remained in a row, roughly trimmed, and with their upper ends ornamented | 0:38:01 | 0:38:05 | |
with round, carved balls. | 0:38:05 | 0:38:07 | |
Now I had suddenly a nearer view, and its first result | 0:38:09 | 0:38:13 | |
was to make me throw my head back as if before a blow. | 0:38:13 | 0:38:16 | |
These round knobs were not ornamental. | 0:38:18 | 0:38:21 | |
Only one, the first I had made out, was facing my way. | 0:38:21 | 0:38:24 | |
Black, dried, sunken, with closed eyelids - | 0:38:24 | 0:38:28 | |
a head that seemed to sleep at the top of that pole, and with the sunken | 0:38:28 | 0:38:33 | |
dry lips showing a narrow white line of the teeth smiling continuously | 0:38:33 | 0:38:38 | |
at some endless and jocose dream of that eternal slumber. | 0:38:38 | 0:38:42 | |
Marlow first sees the heads - Kurtz the vampire's human prey - | 0:38:47 | 0:38:50 | |
through his binoculars, "glasses" in the story. | 0:38:50 | 0:38:55 | |
He might almost have been filming or using a viewfinder. | 0:38:55 | 0:38:59 | |
No wonder that soon after publication and in the wake of | 0:38:59 | 0:39:01 | |
photos of mutilated African workers, | 0:39:01 | 0:39:04 | |
the novel was seen as a form of documentary, | 0:39:04 | 0:39:08 | |
a "Kodak on the Congo". | 0:39:08 | 0:39:09 | |
From the wizardry of Conrad's words comes a clear image, | 0:39:11 | 0:39:14 | |
the sort of reflection you'd expect from a writer who called | 0:39:14 | 0:39:17 | |
another book The Mirror Of The Sea. | 0:39:17 | 0:39:19 | |
In Heart Of Darkness | 0:39:19 | 0:39:21 | |
the Congo, for all its murky depths, is the river as mirror. | 0:39:21 | 0:39:25 | |
Telling the truth through a distortion - | 0:39:28 | 0:39:31 | |
it's one of the oldest tropes of Gothic fiction. | 0:39:31 | 0:39:34 | |
The idea of the wonky mirror which yet reveals | 0:39:34 | 0:39:38 | |
is at the heart of a much neglected section of Ruskin's essay on | 0:39:38 | 0:39:42 | |
the Gothic, which deals with the fearful and dark side, | 0:39:42 | 0:39:45 | |
the grotesque, | 0:39:45 | 0:39:47 | |
and might almost be a description of Conrad's method | 0:39:47 | 0:39:50 | |
in Heart Of Darkness. | 0:39:50 | 0:39:51 | |
In Ruskin's definition of the Gothic he places great weight | 0:39:53 | 0:39:58 | |
on its more horrifying, distorted imagery. | 0:39:58 | 0:40:03 | |
"The fearful grotesque" he calls it. | 0:40:03 | 0:40:05 | |
And yet he argues that it shows us a kind of truth. | 0:40:05 | 0:40:10 | |
Paraphrasing St Paul, he says, "The minds of men are dim. | 0:40:10 | 0:40:15 | |
"We see the world as if through a glass darkly." | 0:40:15 | 0:40:18 | |
And for Ruskin it's worse than that because... | 0:40:18 | 0:40:21 | |
HE EXHALES | 0:40:21 | 0:40:22 | |
..for him the mirror of our perception | 0:40:22 | 0:40:26 | |
is misted by the breath of Satan | 0:40:26 | 0:40:29 | |
and that is where the Gothic, with its grotesquery, comes in. | 0:40:29 | 0:40:33 | |
It cleans that mirror. | 0:40:33 | 0:40:35 | |
What it shows us might be distorted, might be terrifying, | 0:40:35 | 0:40:42 | |
but we see it, we know it is the truth, and we see it clearly. | 0:40:42 | 0:40:45 | |
Ruskin understood the dark side of the Gothic, | 0:40:49 | 0:40:51 | |
its potential to tell us truths we don't want to hear. | 0:40:51 | 0:40:55 | |
Kurtz's heads on sticks are pure Gothic grotesque. | 0:40:55 | 0:40:59 | |
They hark back to the bloodlust of Vlad Dracula, | 0:41:00 | 0:41:03 | |
also known as the Impaler, | 0:41:03 | 0:41:05 | |
the real-life 15th-century Romanian Prince who inspired Bram Stoker, | 0:41:05 | 0:41:12 | |
another reason to think of Kurtz as a kind of imperial vampire. | 0:41:12 | 0:41:15 | |
But those same heads, staring sightlessly into the Congo, | 0:41:18 | 0:41:22 | |
also indicate that there are even bigger fish in Conrad's river. | 0:41:22 | 0:41:26 | |
Heart Of Darkness has been described as Imperial Gothic but | 0:41:29 | 0:41:34 | |
it's a novel of ideas which goes far beyond anxieties about Empire alone. | 0:41:34 | 0:41:39 | |
Like HG Wells's The Time Machine, | 0:41:39 | 0:41:42 | |
published in 1895, just four years before, | 0:41:42 | 0:41:46 | |
Heart Of Darkness has the ambition to contemplate us as a species. | 0:41:46 | 0:41:52 | |
As the 20th century loomed, some writers looked forward with dread, | 0:41:52 | 0:41:58 | |
revising Darwin's Theory of Evolution. | 0:41:58 | 0:42:01 | |
Were we not in fact de-evolving rather than evolving? | 0:42:01 | 0:42:05 | |
Regressing rather than progressing. | 0:42:05 | 0:42:08 | |
Our civilisation merely a veneer beneath which | 0:42:08 | 0:42:12 | |
we were no more advanced than so-called primitive peoples. | 0:42:12 | 0:42:16 | |
Africa in Conrad is the site of utter human degeneracy. | 0:42:19 | 0:42:23 | |
But it is a European, | 0:42:24 | 0:42:25 | |
and a highly sophisticated one, Kurtz, who | 0:42:25 | 0:42:29 | |
goes beyond all moral limits to "the Horror, the Horror!", | 0:42:29 | 0:42:34 | |
as it is put at the end of the novel. | 0:42:34 | 0:42:36 | |
This is what Conrad brings back home to that stretch of the Thames - | 0:42:40 | 0:42:43 | |
his "Kodak on the Congo" is also a portrait of his own doorstep, | 0:42:43 | 0:42:48 | |
Great Britain and Europe. | 0:42:48 | 0:42:50 | |
Whether they were confronting the monsters of modern market forces | 0:42:58 | 0:43:02 | |
or the horrors of global colonialism, | 0:43:02 | 0:43:05 | |
the writers of the fin-de-siecle and early 20th century | 0:43:05 | 0:43:09 | |
found themselves increasingly drawn | 0:43:09 | 0:43:11 | |
to the terror and cruelty of the Gothic tradition. | 0:43:11 | 0:43:16 | |
And as the world itself seemed to descend into nightmare, | 0:43:16 | 0:43:19 | |
with the outbreak of the First World War, so too did | 0:43:19 | 0:43:23 | |
literature descend ever deeper into the realm of the Gothic. | 0:43:23 | 0:43:28 | |
One of the greatest poems in the English language would be | 0:43:34 | 0:43:37 | |
written in the immediate aftermath of that war. | 0:43:37 | 0:43:39 | |
Most of it's set in London, but a phantom London, | 0:43:41 | 0:43:44 | |
where even the commuters seem to be sleepwalking their way to Hell. | 0:43:44 | 0:43:49 | |
TS ELIOT: A crowd flowed over London Bridge, so many, | 0:43:50 | 0:43:55 | |
I had not thought death had undone so many. | 0:43:55 | 0:43:58 | |
Sighs, short and infrequent, were exhaled, | 0:43:59 | 0:44:04 | |
And each man fixed his eyes before his feet. | 0:44:04 | 0:44:07 | |
Flowed up the hill and down King William Street, | 0:44:08 | 0:44:12 | |
To where Saint Mary Woolnoth kept the hours | 0:44:12 | 0:44:15 | |
With a dead sound on the final stroke of nine. | 0:44:15 | 0:44:18 | |
TS Eliot's The Waste Land conveys a deep sense of personal crisis, | 0:44:22 | 0:44:27 | |
possibly triggered by the breakdown of the poet's marriage. | 0:44:27 | 0:44:30 | |
His reading of his own poem, made possible by technology, | 0:44:30 | 0:44:34 | |
allows us to hear his ghost. | 0:44:34 | 0:44:36 | |
Behind one man's pain, you sense that of a whole society struggling | 0:44:38 | 0:44:42 | |
through the aftermath of First World War death and destruction. | 0:44:42 | 0:44:47 | |
And that society is sleepwalking, | 0:44:47 | 0:44:49 | |
without spiritual comfort or moral compass, towards an even | 0:44:49 | 0:44:53 | |
bigger unspecified Apocalypse of biblical, even cosmic proportions. | 0:44:53 | 0:44:59 | |
The poet plays the prophet | 0:44:59 | 0:45:01 | |
but he is like a 20-century century Hamlet, too. | 0:45:01 | 0:45:04 | |
Something is rotten in his mental state, | 0:45:04 | 0:45:07 | |
not to mention the state of Denmark | 0:45:07 | 0:45:10 | |
and the state of every other nation and the whole blasted world, for that matter. | 0:45:10 | 0:45:15 | |
You forget the joins in a poem so hypnotic. | 0:45:15 | 0:45:18 | |
And although it works on the reader like some demonic incantation, | 0:45:20 | 0:45:24 | |
through it all there flows a sense of religious yearning. | 0:45:24 | 0:45:28 | |
In this decayed hole among the mountains | 0:45:30 | 0:45:34 | |
In the faint moonlight, the grass is singing | 0:45:34 | 0:45:37 | |
Over the tumbled graves, about the chapel | 0:45:37 | 0:45:40 | |
There is the empty chapel, only the wind's home. | 0:45:40 | 0:45:43 | |
Although any Holy Grail is a tantalising absence, there is | 0:45:45 | 0:45:49 | |
the odd spiritually uplifting moment in the poem, | 0:45:49 | 0:45:52 | |
a sort of pessimist's epiphany. | 0:45:52 | 0:45:54 | |
O City City, I can sometimes hear | 0:45:56 | 0:45:59 | |
Beside a public bar in Lower Thames Street, | 0:45:59 | 0:46:02 | |
The pleasant whining of a mandoline | 0:46:02 | 0:46:05 | |
And a clatter and a chatter from within | 0:46:05 | 0:46:08 | |
Where fishmen lounge at noon: where the walls | 0:46:08 | 0:46:12 | |
Of Magnus Martyr hold | 0:46:12 | 0:46:15 | |
Inexplicable splendour of Ionian white and gold. | 0:46:15 | 0:46:20 | |
It's often been said that there is something almost | 0:46:23 | 0:46:25 | |
cinematic about The Waste Land, | 0:46:25 | 0:46:28 | |
the way in which Eliot takes "a heap of broken images" in his words | 0:46:28 | 0:46:33 | |
and flashes them up, one after the other, | 0:46:33 | 0:46:36 | |
upon the screens of our imaginations. | 0:46:36 | 0:46:38 | |
But I also think you can see the whole poem | 0:46:38 | 0:46:42 | |
very much as a modern version of a medieval illuminated manuscript, | 0:46:42 | 0:46:47 | |
lit up throughout by flashes of Gothic brilliance, terror and decay. | 0:46:47 | 0:46:52 | |
There is barely a line in the poem which isn't laden with Gothic associations. | 0:46:52 | 0:46:58 | |
Eliot gives us bats, spectres, hooded figures, ruins, churches, | 0:46:58 | 0:47:05 | |
the Tarot, clairvoyants, | 0:47:05 | 0:47:07 | |
and that old occult force of nature, the Thames. | 0:47:07 | 0:47:11 | |
Sweet Thames, run softly, till I end my song. | 0:47:15 | 0:47:19 | |
Eliot uses his sense of place - of places - | 0:47:21 | 0:47:25 | |
to paint a mental landscape, | 0:47:25 | 0:47:27 | |
an anguished "unreal city" of the mind full of dreams, | 0:47:27 | 0:47:31 | |
dreams of the realities of all the rubble and destruction of war. | 0:47:31 | 0:47:34 | |
This fevered, spectral vision has its counterpart in the work | 0:47:36 | 0:47:39 | |
of certain British painters also haunted by war. | 0:47:39 | 0:47:42 | |
Eliot's bleakness is already there | 0:47:45 | 0:47:47 | |
in Paul Nash's We Are Making A New World, | 0:47:47 | 0:47:50 | |
which shows the real wasteland of World War I. | 0:47:50 | 0:47:54 | |
But no dead, no bodies. | 0:47:54 | 0:47:56 | |
And yet every image - amputated tree stumps, gangrene | 0:47:56 | 0:48:01 | |
swellings of earth - indicates the presence of war. | 0:48:01 | 0:48:04 | |
There's a yet more unsettling version of this abstract, | 0:48:07 | 0:48:10 | |
literally disembodied sense of the horrors of the Great War | 0:48:10 | 0:48:14 | |
in Algernon Newton's London paintings of the 1920s and '30s. | 0:48:14 | 0:48:18 | |
The city, a forlorn film set, eerie in the sunlight, | 0:48:20 | 0:48:24 | |
waiting for a generation that will never come back. | 0:48:24 | 0:48:27 | |
The greatest Gothic painter of the 20th century was | 0:48:29 | 0:48:32 | |
Francis Bacon - part of a later generation, | 0:48:32 | 0:48:35 | |
he was only 13 when The Waste Land was published. | 0:48:35 | 0:48:38 | |
But he was inspired by all of Eliot's poetry | 0:48:38 | 0:48:42 | |
and drew on it for the titles of some of his pictures. | 0:48:42 | 0:48:45 | |
And like Eliot, but in a far more visceral way, | 0:48:45 | 0:48:49 | |
Bacon filled his work with the Gothic - snarling mouths, | 0:48:49 | 0:48:53 | |
bodies in basements, blood everywhere. | 0:48:53 | 0:48:55 | |
The popular image of Bacon, and one which he was only too happy | 0:48:57 | 0:49:01 | |
to project, was that of the habitue of old Soho, a London bohemian. | 0:49:01 | 0:49:07 | |
But to get to the root of him - and ever closer to the vampire | 0:49:07 | 0:49:10 | |
heartland of Gothic - you've got come to Ireland. | 0:49:10 | 0:49:14 | |
In fact, Bacon's London studio is now here - | 0:49:19 | 0:49:22 | |
after his death it was transported, lock, stock and paintbrush, | 0:49:22 | 0:49:26 | |
to the National Gallery of Ireland in Dublin. | 0:49:26 | 0:49:29 | |
Is this an installation or is it a reliquary? | 0:49:30 | 0:49:35 | |
A shrine to St Francis Bacon, painter. | 0:49:35 | 0:49:39 | |
It was amidst this clutter, the chaos he loved, | 0:49:39 | 0:49:42 | |
that Bacon created his bloodied triptychs and his mock crucifixions. | 0:49:42 | 0:49:48 | |
I think this is a very apt expression of the true, | 0:49:48 | 0:49:52 | |
awkward place he occupies in modern British Irish art. | 0:49:52 | 0:49:57 | |
The rest of this building is textbook neo-Classical. | 0:49:57 | 0:50:02 | |
This is a Gothic crypt. | 0:50:02 | 0:50:04 | |
Ireland's central to the history of Gothic, | 0:50:11 | 0:50:13 | |
not just because it was Bacon's birthplace | 0:50:13 | 0:50:16 | |
but because so much else that is Gothic | 0:50:16 | 0:50:18 | |
was born kicking and screaming here. | 0:50:18 | 0:50:21 | |
Charles Maturin's Melmoth The Wanderer, in which a man sells his soul to the devil, | 0:50:22 | 0:50:28 | |
was one of the first great Gothic novels, followed by many others, | 0:50:28 | 0:50:32 | |
including Sheridan Le Fanu's Carmilla, the lurid tale of lesbian | 0:50:32 | 0:50:37 | |
vampirism on which Hammer's The Vampire Lovers would later be based. | 0:50:37 | 0:50:41 | |
Oscar Wilde also got in on the act with The Picture Of Dorian Gray, | 0:50:42 | 0:50:46 | |
his novel about a beautiful but damned young aesthete | 0:50:46 | 0:50:50 | |
haunted by a portrait that predicts his own decay. | 0:50:50 | 0:50:54 | |
And the Gothic fascinated Ireland's most famous modern poet, | 0:50:56 | 0:51:00 | |
WB Yeats, who wrote ghost stories, dabbled in the occult, | 0:51:00 | 0:51:04 | |
and revived Irish folk tales and myths, | 0:51:04 | 0:51:07 | |
for reasons as much to do with politics as poetry. | 0:51:07 | 0:51:09 | |
Yeats was part of the Anglo-Irish elite | 0:51:10 | 0:51:13 | |
and wanted to get in with the Catholic nationalists who | 0:51:13 | 0:51:15 | |
distrusted his whole class. | 0:51:15 | 0:51:17 | |
He was saying, | 0:51:18 | 0:51:20 | |
"Look, I'm one of you really - very Irish, very superstitious, | 0:51:20 | 0:51:23 | |
"I believe in magic." | 0:51:23 | 0:51:25 | |
Ireland was fertile ground for the Gothic precisely | 0:51:30 | 0:51:32 | |
because it was a divided place. | 0:51:32 | 0:51:34 | |
It was the earliest British colony, bloodily repressed. | 0:51:36 | 0:51:40 | |
The very first heart of darkness, you might say. | 0:51:40 | 0:51:43 | |
And Ireland was also Bram Stoker's birthplace. | 0:51:45 | 0:51:48 | |
It's been argued that Count Dracula feeding on the Transylvannian | 0:51:48 | 0:51:52 | |
peasantry is a grim caricature of the absentee Anglo-Irish landlord, | 0:51:52 | 0:51:56 | |
a bloodsucking parasite exploiting his tenants - | 0:51:56 | 0:51:59 | |
plausible, because when researching his novel Stoker did | 0:51:59 | 0:52:03 | |
compare Transylvanian peasants to "our Paddy". | 0:52:03 | 0:52:06 | |
So Stoker's Dracula, written in 1897, can be | 0:52:07 | 0:52:11 | |
read as a veiled commentary on problems that would boil over | 0:52:11 | 0:52:15 | |
two decades later, during Bacon's formative early years. | 0:52:15 | 0:52:19 | |
Bacon's background was grander than Stoker's | 0:52:20 | 0:52:22 | |
but they were both part of the Protestant ruling elite | 0:52:22 | 0:52:26 | |
and both inherited the same deep-rooted fears. | 0:52:26 | 0:52:30 | |
In fact, the Anglo-Irish had been on the defensive | 0:52:30 | 0:52:33 | |
since the mid-19th century. | 0:52:33 | 0:52:34 | |
By the 1860s, the Anglo-Irish ascendancy felt | 0:52:36 | 0:52:40 | |
more like a descendancy. | 0:52:40 | 0:52:42 | |
They were hemmed in, | 0:52:42 | 0:52:44 | |
threatened by the rise of anti-British Irish nationalism | 0:52:44 | 0:52:48 | |
and by the growth of the Catholic middle class. | 0:52:48 | 0:52:52 | |
There were anxieties and panics, most of them pure fantasies, | 0:52:52 | 0:52:55 | |
about attacks on "The Big House", the generic name for | 0:52:55 | 0:53:00 | |
these great Georgian slabs of granite | 0:53:00 | 0:53:03 | |
in which the ruling class mostly lived. | 0:53:03 | 0:53:06 | |
An Anglo-Irishman's home was fast becoming his haunted castle. | 0:53:06 | 0:53:12 | |
Francis Bacon's Anglo-Irish home was haunted by his sadistic, | 0:53:16 | 0:53:20 | |
manipulative father, a military man and racehorse trainer, | 0:53:20 | 0:53:24 | |
who had the young Bacon horsewhipped by his stable grooms. | 0:53:24 | 0:53:28 | |
Bacon was fascinated by the cruelties inflicted by authority. | 0:53:28 | 0:53:32 | |
Does that constant recurring image in his work | 0:53:33 | 0:53:36 | |
of the snarling vampire mouth | 0:53:36 | 0:53:38 | |
represent Bacon's own father? The Anglo-Irish class, even, | 0:53:38 | 0:53:43 | |
crying out not just in defiance but also in paranoia? | 0:53:43 | 0:53:47 | |
One thing is certain - for the young Bacon, the Irish countryside, with | 0:53:53 | 0:53:57 | |
its ancient peat bogs and all the old folklore, | 0:53:57 | 0:54:01 | |
was a landscape of fear, | 0:54:01 | 0:54:03 | |
especially in the 1920s, when trouble had brewed up, | 0:54:03 | 0:54:06 | |
as so often in Ireland, into The Troubles. | 0:54:06 | 0:54:09 | |
Bacon's sense that he was part of a threatened class was sharpened | 0:54:11 | 0:54:17 | |
when he stayed with his maternal grandfather, who, | 0:54:17 | 0:54:20 | |
as a chief of police, was a prime target for the Irish Republicans. | 0:54:20 | 0:54:26 | |
And one night, Bacon would have been around ten or 11, | 0:54:26 | 0:54:30 | |
he and his grandfather were driving along | 0:54:30 | 0:54:33 | |
when their car broke down somewhere round here in the Bog of Allan. | 0:54:33 | 0:54:37 | |
They had to abandon it and go on by foot. | 0:54:37 | 0:54:40 | |
It was dark, they could hear cries and halloos and see flashing lights. | 0:54:40 | 0:54:46 | |
The rebel groups were out to get them. | 0:54:46 | 0:54:49 | |
They made their way to safety. | 0:54:49 | 0:54:51 | |
They found refuge in a friendly house, a Big House, of course. | 0:54:51 | 0:54:55 | |
But Bacon never forgot the sense of terror he felt that night. | 0:54:55 | 0:54:59 | |
It was Bacon's achievement to make from his anxiety images that | 0:55:04 | 0:55:08 | |
could speak - scream - to Everyman. | 0:55:08 | 0:55:12 | |
He'd soon leave Ireland and feed on terrors far beyond its shores, | 0:55:12 | 0:55:16 | |
but I'm not sure Ireland ever left him. | 0:55:16 | 0:55:19 | |
Three Figures At The Base Of A Crucifixion, 1946. | 0:55:22 | 0:55:26 | |
An altarpiece for the generation of Auschwitz. | 0:55:26 | 0:55:29 | |
The memory of the screaming father figure is still there, | 0:55:29 | 0:55:33 | |
but there's far more to the painting than a Freudian childhood trauma. | 0:55:33 | 0:55:37 | |
This was Bacon's way of saying that we in the modern world aren't | 0:55:37 | 0:55:41 | |
just living the Gothic nightmare, we may never wake up from it. | 0:55:41 | 0:55:45 | |
And who can say he was entirely wrong? | 0:55:46 | 0:55:48 | |
It was true by mid-20th century and it's even truer today - | 0:55:51 | 0:55:55 | |
Gothic's everywhere. We're all Gothic now. | 0:55:55 | 0:55:59 | |
What do I really mean by that? | 0:55:59 | 0:56:01 | |
Not just that Gothic's in our paintings, our books, | 0:56:02 | 0:56:06 | |
the films we go to see. | 0:56:06 | 0:56:08 | |
It's in our minds. | 0:56:08 | 0:56:10 | |
Many of the worst Gothic nightmares, like Frankenstein and Dracula, | 0:56:10 | 0:56:14 | |
were once branded weird or sensationalist. | 0:56:14 | 0:56:17 | |
But they were so prophetic that now they're everyone's bad dreams. | 0:56:17 | 0:56:21 | |
But the influence of Gothic's optimists is still with us too, | 0:56:27 | 0:56:30 | |
the influence of Marx and Morris, who saw the negative side | 0:56:30 | 0:56:34 | |
of the modern world but wanted to change it | 0:56:34 | 0:56:37 | |
into a better place. | 0:56:37 | 0:56:39 | |
As Morris said, | 0:56:39 | 0:56:40 | |
"We shall be our own Goths, | 0:56:40 | 0:56:42 | |
"and at whatever cost break up the new tyrannous empire of capitalism!" | 0:56:42 | 0:56:48 | |
You don't have to be an anti-capitalist to feel the pressure | 0:56:48 | 0:56:52 | |
modern advertising puts on us all to consume and conform. | 0:56:52 | 0:56:56 | |
So, the Goths of today are actually true to Morris in their own way - | 0:56:56 | 0:57:02 | |
asserting their individuality, | 0:57:02 | 0:57:04 | |
marking themselves out. | 0:57:04 | 0:57:06 | |
And if they all look different in the same kind of way - | 0:57:06 | 0:57:09 | |
well, maybe they're just finding out, like Morris, | 0:57:09 | 0:57:12 | |
that being a rebel comes with contradictions. | 0:57:12 | 0:57:15 | |
Yes, the legacy of Gothic's everywhere. | 0:57:18 | 0:57:20 | |
Which brings me back, one last time, to Bram Stoker's Dracula. | 0:57:20 | 0:57:25 | |
Not Count Dracula, but the book's other vampire, new technology. | 0:57:25 | 0:57:29 | |
I think Stoker was well and truly spooked by the idea that people, | 0:57:30 | 0:57:35 | |
or their traces, might continue to live, ghost-like, in the machine. | 0:57:35 | 0:57:41 | |
What would he have made of our main machine, the mobile? | 0:57:43 | 0:57:47 | |
It grips us by the ear and the eye, if not the neck, | 0:57:48 | 0:57:52 | |
and connects us constantly to a realm of the spirits. | 0:57:52 | 0:57:55 | |
Real life is elsewhere, a poet once said. | 0:57:57 | 0:58:00 | |
Well, now, it really is elsewhere, because this little device | 0:58:00 | 0:58:04 | |
doesn't just let us speak to people who aren't really here, | 0:58:04 | 0:58:09 | |
it allows us to listen to their music, to see their pictures. | 0:58:09 | 0:58:12 | |
But there's a cost because you have to disconnect | 0:58:14 | 0:58:17 | |
from your own immediate reality | 0:58:17 | 0:58:20 | |
to connect to the life that's in the machine. | 0:58:20 | 0:58:23 | |
I had not thought Google had undone so many. | 0:58:23 | 0:58:27 | |
Perhaps what this little piece of Gothic - all Gothic - | 0:58:27 | 0:58:30 | |
really proves is that we yearn to be haunted, | 0:58:30 | 0:58:34 | |
to be taken outside and beyond of ourselves. | 0:58:34 | 0:58:39 | |
You can call it megabytes, | 0:58:39 | 0:58:41 | |
but it's really just the bite of Dracula. | 0:58:41 | 0:58:44 | |
MOBILE PHONE RINGS | 0:58:46 | 0:58:47 |