It is pirated world that is hidden in history. They are remote stories that contain terrible facts and impossible reality. It is not a secret that copyright infringement has found a house in Western pop culture; mystery and drama romance seems to follow any pirate image. Historically, some scholars have refused this romantic view. All scholarly voices are in Jack Sparrow or Long John Silver. While historians continue to consider piracy based on historical background, conflict is centered around the truth of pirates, as social culture relies on a dramatic romantic perspective.
With the Romantic American Revolution, literature of the 19th century became a novel. Romanticism is the era when artists have left ancient, classical, rational era and began offering imagination, emotions and new literature that support the freedom and personality of nature, humanity, society. Main features or romantic movements are the secret to revealing the depths of mankind to emphasize imagination and the transition from neoclassicism to romantic arises from the desire for freedom of thought. Romantic believe truly, believe that the way to freedom is to act through emotions, not logic, and rather emotion rather than cognition. Romantic exercise regards passion and emotion as a true source of aesthetic experience and reaffirms the recognition of anxiety, awe, fear and sublimation. The most famous is Théodore Geelault
Gothic novel is a kind of literature combining fiction, horror, romanticism, with particular focus on mysterious and supernatural aspects. Gothic novels were born in England in the late 18th century. This unique kind of literature quickly developed into a phenomenon of the 19th century. The success of this mainstream type of England is often due to Mary Sherry. - Well, I think we should be right. Gothic literature (more specifically Gothic Romance) was first introduced in the world in 1764. At the time, a man named Horace · Walpole wrote a small "small song" entitled "Otranto Castle" and most literary experts agreed that it was a pioneer of Gothic. At that time, it was at least a mixed reaction. "... First of all, it raises the topic of controversy and inflammatory speech (Alfred porter from Gothic Horror p. 128, Clive Bloom)."