Southern Gothic
The creepy, gothic version of the rural Southeast United States. Scenes show dying vegetation, decaying plantations, rusty farm implements, forbidding swamps with something lurking within, and frighteningly expressionless folk standing around doing...nothing, except staring at the protagonists.
See also Deep South, which is portrayed as more morally than materially decrepit. Compare Lovecraft Country and The Savage South.
Examples of Southern Gothic include:
Film
Literature
- Tobacco Road
- Various novels by William Faulkner.
- Nearly everything Flannery O'Connor ever wrote.
- To Kill a Mockingbird has elements of this, as well as being set in the Deep South.
- The Other by Thomas Tryon
- Anne Rice's Blackwood Farm has more mausoleums than people, not to mention an entire house sunk to the second story in a swamp.
- The early novels of Cormac McCarthy.
Live-Action TV
- True Blood
- True Detective
Manga
Video Games
Other
- The Haunted Mansion ride in Disneyland.
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