Gothic Antiquity is essentially a literary study, but enriched by a clear understanding of the antiquarian engagement with the mediaeval past and its relics, and of the development of philosophical ideas of associationist aesthetics that together underpinned the rediscovery of the Gothic. It provides a detailed and useful summary of a substantial number of Gothic novels, their plots and their authors, and shows how the genre evolved from Walpole to Radcliffe
and Charlotte Smith and Sophia Lee, on to 'Monk' Lewis and Maturin and beyond. Above all, it charts a sea-change in popular taste from the Augustan and classical certainties of the early eighteenth century, to an early nineteenth-century world where the head of a landed family might well re-build his seat in
a Gothic style to demonstrate his family's antiquity (a successful City merchant might do the same to demonstrate his family's aspirations).
Dale Townshend is Professor of Gothic Literature in the Manchester Centre for Gothic Studies, Manchester Metropolitan University. He has published widely on Gothic and Romantic writing of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, including most recently The Gothic World (with Glennis Byron; Routledge, 2014); Ann Radcliffe, Romanticism and the Gothic (with Angela Wright; Cambridge University Press, 2014); Romantic Gothic: An Edinburgh
Companion (with Angela Wright; Edinburgh University Press, 2016); and Writing Britain's Ruins (with Michael Carter and Peter N. Lindfield; British Library, 2017). He was academic advisor on the 'Terror and Wonder: The Gothic Imagination' exhibition at the British Library (2014-2015). Between June 2015 and June 2017, he
was the Principal Investigator on an AHRC Leadership Fellowship entitled Writing Britain's Ruins, 1700-1850: The Architectural Imagination, and in 2016, held a Fellowship at the Lewis Walpole Library, Yale University.