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Goths
The Connection to Whitby |
| The Whitby Gothic Weekend is a
twice-yearly festival for Goths, in Whitby,
North
Yorkshire, England.
The first festival was held in
1994, and it was held annually until 1997, when it became a
twice-yearly event - generally held in April and
October/November. Whitby was chosen in part because it
features in Bram Stoker's
Dracula
as well as inspiring it.
It has now grown into one of the
most popular gothic events in the world, attracting attendees
from across the UK and around the world. Most of the events
are held at the town's 1,000 capacity Spa Pavilion, however,
other venues such as The Metropole Hotel are used for
overspill and unofficial events.
Accommodation
is normally fully booked up well in advance.
Although referred to as a
"weekend" it includes events during the day on
Friday and fringe events on the Thursday and Monday. The event
always sells out and many more people attend than there are
tickets available, resulting in booming business for Whitby
pubs such as The Angel and The Elsinore.
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| What is Goth?
The word goth can be used as a noun. For example, one may
say, "My best friend is a goth." Plurally, an s is
added, as in, "At the club there were many goths." Gothic
and goth can also be used interchangeably as adjectives, as
is the case with, "She was wearing a gothic necklace", or,
"He is goth." The word gothic is sometimes used as
a noun in non-English speaking countries, as in, "I saw a
gothic!" This use is comparatively rare, and grammatically
incorrect in English.
Goth cannot be used as a singular name for a group of
people or the subculture in general. "A member of goth",
for example, is incorrect, because goth is not the name of an
organized group. To refer correctly to the entire group of people,
one may use the terms goths, the goth subculture, or the
gothic subculture. Gothic, when used as an adjective, can
potentially refer to anything dark or horrifying, or something
influenced by medieval Gothic
art, and not necessarily to something associated with modern
gothic subculture.
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Original subculture
By the late 1970s, there were a few post-punk
bands in the United
Kingdom labelled "gothic." However, it was not until
the early 1980s that gothic
rock became its own subgenre
within post-punk
and that followers of these bands started to come together as a
distinctly recognizable group. The opening of the Batcave
in London's Soho in
July 1982 provided a prominent meeting point for the emerging scene,
which had briefly been labelled positive
punk by the New
Musical Express.
The term "Batcaver" was later used to describe old-school
goths.
Independent of the British scene, the late 1970s and early 1980s
saw death
rock branch off from American punk.
In Germany,
members of the emerging goth subculture were called Grufties
(engl. "vault creatures" or "tomb
creatures") in the '80s and early '90s. They represented
generally a fusion between the goth subculture and the New
wave movement and were forming the early part of the "dark
culture."
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Goth after post-punk
After the demise of post-punk,
goth continued to evolve, both musically and visually. This caused
variations in style ("types" of goth). Local scenes also
contributed to this variation. By the 1990s, Victorian fashion saw a
renewed popularity in the goth scene, drawing on the mid-19th
century gothic
revival and the more morbid aspects of Victorian
culture. The 2003 Victoria
and Albert Museum Gothic exhibition in London furthered a
tenuous connection between modern goth and the medieval
gothic period.
Over time, the gothic subculture has developed its own "goth
slang", with regional variations.
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The original Goths and gothic horror
The original Goths
were a Germanic
tribe who played an important role in the fall of the western Roman
Empire. The name "goth" later became pejorative:
synonymous with "barbarian"
and being uncultured (a similar fate befell the name of another such
tribe, the Vandals).
During the Renaissance
period in Europe,
medieval architecture
was retrospectively labelled gothic
architecture, and was considered ugly and barbaric in contrast
to the pure lines of classical
architecture. In the United Kingdom, by the late 1700s, however,
nostalgia for the medieval period destroyed by the Reformation
led people to become fascinated with medieval gothic ruins. This
sometimes went to the extent of building fake ruins. This
fascination was often combined with an interest in medieval romances,
Roman
Catholic religion, and the supernatural. Enthusiasts for gothic
revival architecture in the United Kingdom were led by Horace
Walpole, and were sometimes nicknamed "goths", the
first positive use of the term in the modern period.
| The gothic
novel of the late eighteenth century, a genre founded by Horace
Walpole with the 1764 publication of The
Castle of Otranto, was responsible for the more modern
connotations of the term gothic. Henceforth, the term was
associated with a mood of horror,
morbidity, darkness and the supernatural. The gothic novel
established much of the iconography of later horror literature and
cinema, such as graveyards,
ruined castles
or churches, ghosts,
vampires,
nightmares, cursed
families, being buried
alive and melodramatic
plots. Another notable element was the brooding figure of the gothic
villain,
which developed into the Byronic
hero. The most famous gothic villain is the
vampire,
Dracula,
originally depicted in a novel by
Bram
Stoker, then made more famous through the medium of horror
movies. |

Strawberry Hill, an English
villa in the "Gothic revival" style, built by
seminal Gothic writer Horace Walpole
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The
Addams Family - Main Title |
The powerful imagery of horror movies began in German
expressionist cinema in the twenties then passed onto the Universal
Studios films of the thirties, then to camp horror B films such
as Plan
9 From Outer Space and then to Hammer
Horror films. By the 1960s, TV
series, such as The
Addams Family and The
Munsters, used these stereotypes for camp comedy.
Certain elements in the dark, atmospheric music and dress of the
post
punk scene were clearly "gothic" in this sense,
exemplified by the names of such post
punk bands as UK
Decay and Southern
Death Cult. The use of "gothic" as an adjective in
describing this music and its followers led to the term "goth".
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Music, Literature and Fashion
The influence of the gothic novel on the goth subculture can be
seen in numerous examples of the subculture's poetry and music,
though this influence sometimes came second hand, through the
popular imagery of horror
films and television. In particular, the imagery surrounding
male and female vampires, witches, sorcerers, and spies, had a
significant influence on the evolution of gothic
fashion. The Byronic hero, in particular, was a key precursor to
the male goth image, while Dracula's iconic portrayal by Bela
Lugosi appealed powerfully to early goths. They were attracted
by Lugosi's aura of camp menace, elegance and mystique. Some people
even credit the band Bauhaus'
first single "Bela
Lugosi's Dead", with the start of the goth subculture,
though many prior art house movements also influenced gothic fashion
and style. A notable early example was Siouxsie
Sioux, of the musical group Siouxsie
and the Banshees. Some members of Bauhaus were, themselves, fine
art students and/or active artists.
The concept of the femme
fatale, which appeared in Romantic
literature, film
noir, as well as in the gothic
novel, went on to become a vital image for female goths. In
cinema, the femme fatale style adopted by silent movie actress Theda
Bara exerted a lasting influence. Bara was nicknamed the vamp,
and her first name was an anagram for "death"). She
established the look for pale predatory women in later films, which
ultimately influenced the goth subculture.
Some of the early gothic
rock and death
rock artists adopted traditional horror movie images, and also
drew on horror movie soundtracks for inspiration. Their audiences
responded in kind by further adopting appropriate dress and props.
Use of standard horror film props like swirling smoke, rubber bats,
and cobwebs were used as gothic club décor from the beginning in
The Batcave. Such references in their music and image were
originally tongue-in-cheek,
but as time went on, bands and members of the subculture took the
connection more seriously. As a result, morbid, supernatural,
and occult
themes became a more noticeably serious element in the subculture.
The interconnection between horror and goth was highlighted in its
early days by The
Hunger, a 1983 vampire film, which starred David
Bowie, Catherine
Deneuve, and Susan
Sarandon. The movie featured gothic rock group Bauhaus
performing "Bela
Lugosi's Dead" in a nightclub. In 1993, Whitby
became the location for what became the UK's biggest goth festival
as a direct result of being featured in Bram Stoker's
Dracula.
| Throughout the evolution of the goth subculture, familiarity with
gothic literature became a significant for many goths. Poe, Lovecraft,
Shelley, Dante
and the other heralding names became just as symbolic of the
subculture as dressing all in black, wearing the hair dramatically stylised
and dyed black, adorning oneself with dark jewellery (similar to
Jet
jewellery from Whitby) and body
art, and carrying around a decorated tin lunchbox. |

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A newer literary influence on the gothic scene was
Anne
Rice's re-imagining of the idea of the vampire.
Rice's characters were depicted as struggling with eternity and
loneliness, this with their ambivalent or tragic sexuality had deep
attractions for many goth readers, making her works very popular in
the eighties through the nineties. Movies based on her books have
been filmed in recent years - notably Interview
with the Vampire, which starred Brad Pitt, and the more
recent Queen
of the Damned, in which goths appear directly and
indirectly. The first film, in particular, helped further encourage
the spread of Victorian style fashions in the subculture (although
period inspired clothing has been a recurrent trend in the gothic
subculture). Rice's novels influenced Poppy
Z. Brite's vampire novels. Brite, who is familiar with the
gothic scene, distinctively refers to it in her novels as the
location of where her vampires hunt. Both Brite and Rice are
connected to New
Orleans, often seen as a gothic mecca.
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Later media influences
As the subculture became well-established the connection between
goth and horror fiction became almost a cliché, with goths quite
likely to appear as characters in horror novels and film. Movies
such as The
Crow drew directly on goth music and style, and the movies
of Tim
Burton, especially Beetlejuice,
featuring a goth teen, Edward
Scissorhands, The
Nightmare Before Christmas, and Corpse
Bride are all significant. In turn they drew new people into
the gothic scene. Anne
Rice's book series "The Vampire Chronicles" and the
popular World
of Darkness roleplaying games, especially Vampire:
The Masquerade, also referred directly to gothic music and
culture and encouraged an interest in the scene. In these
pop-culture depictions of vampires, vampires are depicted as suave,
gothic sophisticates, with naturally darkened eyes and pallid skin.
Influences from anime
as well as cyberpunk
fiction such as The
Matrix have also crept into the goth scene, which helped
give rise to a new subculture and a new label, Cyber
subculture, or the Industrial/goth offshoot, cybergoth;
they also added to the popularity of Industrial
music.
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Content taken from
Wikipedia.org |
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