442 pages

English language

Published April 6, 2002 by Oxford University Press.

ISBN:
978-0-19-515136-7
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5 stars (2 reviews)

`The Monk was so highly popular that it seemed to create an epoch in our literature', wrote Sir Walter Scott. Set in the sinister monastery of the Capuchins in Madrid, The Monk is a violent tale of ambition, murder, and incest. The great struggle between maintaining monastic vows and fulfilling personal ambitions leads its main character, the monk Ambrosio, to temptation and the breaking of his vows, then to sexual obsession and rape, and finally to murder in order to conceal his guilt. Inspired by German horror romanticism and the work of Ann Radcliffe, Lewis produced his masterpiece at the age of nineteen. It contains many typical Gothic elements - seduction in a monastery, lustful monks, evil Abbesses, bandits and beautiful heroines. But, as the Introduction to this new edition shows, Lewis also played with convention, ranging from gruesome realism to social comedy, and even parodied the genre in which …

22 editions

Review of 'The monk' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

When The Monk was first published in 1796 it was surrounded by heated hatred and scandal. One critic claimed that The Monk was full of "Lust, murder, incest, and every atrocity that can disgrace human nature"; a line that now seems to commonly appear in the synopsis. While this novel is a transgressive gothic novel and possibly one of the first books to feature a priest in such a villainous way there is so much more going on within the pages. To begin, we must look at the context, and it is not surprising that this novel had so much anger towards it when it was released. The reader has to understand that this novel was released in a period of time where everything was changing. The church still played a huge role in English society but across the channel the French Revolution was raging on, so in the …

Review of 'The monk' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

L’intrigue se déroule en Espagne (l’auteur semble l’oublier quelques fois quand il parle de Strada di San Iago ou Strada di la vida..curieux mélanges hispano-italien, ou alors je ne suis pas au courant de certains faits historiques et culturels), dans une société où la religion et la superstition cohabitent allègrement.
Un moine dont la réputation de saint a fait le tour de Madrid se voit peu à peu sombrer dans le péché et la luxure. Un jeune homme nommé Lorenzo de Medina tombe amoureux d’Antonia, venue à Madrid avec sa mère demander de l’aide à leur beau-frère et oncle, Don Raymond de las Cisternas, ami de Lorenzo. Don Raymond est amoureux d’Agnès, jeune soeur de Lorenzo, mais Agnès a pris le voile, et une évasion est mise en place. Hélàs, la jeune pécheresse est démasquée, l’évasion avortée. Entre-temps, le moine Ambrosio, orphelin voué à la vie monastique dès l’enfance, est …

Subjects

  • Monks -- Fiction
  • Incest -- Fiction
  • Rape -- Fiction
  • Madrid (Spain) -- Fiction