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AuthorJames Smith-
Date2018-
Other Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.17613/M6GP1R-
URIhttps://www.amad.org/jspui/handle/123456789/64715-
DescriptionClark Ashton Smith—unlike the more famous H.P. Lovecraft—engaged with the medieval as a setting for his fiction. Lovecraft admired classical Roman civilization and the eighteenth century, but had little time for medieval themes. As Brantley Bryant has related, Lovecraft wrote contemptuously that the Middle Ages was a period that “snivel[ed] along after real civilization faded.”2 Smith, however, has a more complex and curious relationship with the medieval. It is not necessary to admire the Middle Ages to be preoccupied by it—Ernst Robert Curtius devoted a great deal of his scholarly life to studying a period that he considered derivative, its achievements reflections of a superior Classical tradition.3 Lovecraft actively vilified the medieval, but Smith basked in its literary poetics and textures while being indifferent to historicism. In this essay, I explore a medieval world created with a fleshed-out topography and fully-formed cultural context serving as a backdrop for bizarre and hideous themes of weird fiction in the face of human insignificance.-
Languageeng-
KeywordsH.P. Lovecraft-
KeywordsPoetry-
KeywordsScience fiction-
KeywordsMedievalism-
KeywordsHorror-
KeywordsGenre-
Keywords20th-century fantastic literature-
KeywordsWeird fiction-
Dewey Decimal Classification940-
TitleDisturbing the Ant-Hill: Misanthropy and Cosmic Indifference in Clark Ashton Smith’s Medieval Averoigne-
AMAD ID569339-
Year2018-
Open Access1-
Appears in Collections:BASE (Bielefeld Academic Search Engine)
General history of Europe


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