Mexican Gothic By Silvia Moreno-Garcia

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Karol Suarez English 1B Ms. Woodward May 14, 2024 Mexican Gothic and the Uncanny Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia is a novel set in Mexico during the 1950’s. We follow Noemi Taboda, the youngest daughter of a wealthy family, who receives a letter from her cousin Catinlina, in this letter Catilina expresses fear, stating that she has been having visions, her husband is trying to poison her, and that they must save her. Catilina recently got married and is now living with her husband in High Place. Noemi's father sends Noemi to High Place to check up on Catalina. Upon arriving at High Place, Noemi quickly notices the decaying, rotten mansion and the gloomy atmosphere. In this mansion lives the Doyle family, which we later find out has a very dark …show more content…

These unsettling elements highlight the lingering effects of colonization, like racial superiority and control. Garcia creates an uncanny feeling through the recurring use of mushrooms and the idea that death is always present. The depiction of sexual taboos like incest and breeding, and the portrayal of power dynamics show how colonialism still affects power and race. The mix of familiar and unfamiliar fits with Freud’s theory of the uncanny. In the essay, The “Uncanny”, Sigmund Freud describes the uncanny as a frightening feeling because it is both familiar and foreign at the same time. Throughout the essay “uncanny” is used as the English translation of “unheimlich”. The uncanny refers to the peculiar and unsettling feeling that something that was once familiar has now become uncomfortable or foreign. Some examples he provides in his essay of where we might catch this feeling include: Secrets/something that you’ve tried to keep hidden but resurface in an unfamiliar form. Doppelgangers blur the line between oneself and others and challenge one’s sense of

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