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{{short description|Contemporary subculture}}
{{About|the subculture|the Germanic tribes|Goths|other uses|Gothic (disambiguation)}}
{{About|the subculture|the Germanic tribes|Goths|other uses|Goth (disambiguation){{!}}Goth}}
]
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2020}}
The '''goth subculture''' is a contemporary ] found in many countries. It began in ] during the early 1980s in the ] scene, an offshoot of the ] genre. The goth subculture has survived much longer than others of the same era, and has continued to diversify. Its imagery and cultural proclivities indicate influences from the 19th century ] along with ]s and to a lesser extent the ] culture.<ref>César Fuentes Rodríguez "Mundo Gótico", pages 18 & ss./pages 206 & ss.</ref><ref>Carol Siegel "Goth's Dark Empire", pages 8-13 and ss.</ref><ref name=cintra>Cintra Wilson, "You just can't kill it", '']'', September 17, 2008. Access date: September 18, 2008.</ref>
{{Use Oxford spelling|date=October 2017}}
]
'''Goth''' is a ] that began in the ] during the early 1980s. It was developed by fans of ], an offshoot of the ] music genre. Post-punk artists who anticipated the gothic rock genre and helped develop and shape the subculture include ], ], ] and ].


The goth subculture has survived much longer than others of the same era, and has continued to diversify and spread throughout the world. Its imagery and cultural proclivities indicate influences from 19th-century ] and from ]s. The scene is centered on music festivals, nightclubs, and organized meetings, especially in ]. The subculture has associated tastes in music, aesthetics and fashion.
The goth subculture has associated tastes in music, aesthetics, and ]. Gothic music encompasses a number of different styles including ], ], ], ], ] and ]. Styles of dress within the subculture range from ], ] and ] style attire, or combinations of the above, most often with dark attire, ] and hair.


The ] preferred by goths includes a number of styles such as gothic rock, ], ], ] and ].<ref>Nym, Alexander: ''Schillerndes Dunkel. Geschichte, Entwicklung und Themen der Gothic-Szene'', Plöttner Verlag 2010, {{ISBN|3-862-11006-0}}, pp. 145–169</ref> The Gothic fashion style draws influences from ], new wave, ] fashion<ref name="Wallraff">{{cite book|last1=Farin|first1=Klaus|last2=Wallraff|first2=Kirsten|last3=Archiv der Jugendkulturen e.V., Berlin|title=Die Gothics: Interviews, Fotografien|date=1999|publisher=Tilsner|location=Bad Tölz|isbn=9783933773098| page=23|edition=Orig.-Ausg.}}</ref> and the dressing styles of earlier periods such as the ], ] and ] eras. The style most often includes dark (usually solid black) attire, dark makeup and black hair.
==Origins and development==
<!-- Deleted image removed: ] were a major contributor to the style of "goth" early on.{{ffdc|1=Siouxsie New Sounds new styles.jpg|log=2009 December 30}}]] -->
By the late 1970s, there were a few ] bands labeled "gothic". However, it was not until the early 1980s that ] became its own ] within ], and that followers of these bands started to come together as a distinctly recognizable movement. The scene appears to have taken its name from an article published in UK rock weekly '']'': "The face of Punk Gothique",<ref>{{cite web|author=Amorphous |url=http://www.darkindependent.net/The-Face-Of-Punk-Gothique--36005.html |title=The Face Of Punk Gothique—DarkIndependent.net |publisher=Darkplanet.eu |date= |accessdate=2009-04-25}}</ref> written by Steve Keaton and published on February 21, 1981.
The opening of the ] in ]'s ] in July 1982 provided a prominent meeting point for the emerging scene, which had briefly been labeled "positive punk" by the '']''.<ref> ''Scathe.demon.co.uk''. Retrieved April 23, 2006.</ref> The term "Batcaver" was later used to describe old-school goths.


==Music==
Independent from the British scene, the late 1970s and early 1980s saw ] branch off from American punk.<ref> ''Alicebag.com''. Retrieved April 23, 2006.</ref> In the 1980s and early 1990s, members of an emerging subculture in ] were called ''Gruftis'' (English ''"vault creatures"'' or ''"tomb creatures"''); they generally followed a fusion of the gothic and ] with an influence of ], and formed the early stages of the "]" (formerly called "]").
{{main|Gothic rock}}


===Origins and development===
==The goth scene==
] of ] in 1980]]
The term '']'' was coined by music critic John Stickney in 1967 to describe a meeting he had with ] in a dimly lit wine-cellar, which he called "the perfect room to honor the Gothic rock of ]".<ref>{{cite news |newspaper=The Williams Record |date=24 October 1967 |author=John Stickney |title=Four Doors to the Future: Gothic Rock Is Their Thing}} Posted at {{cite web|url=http://mildequator.com/performancehistory/articlesreviews1967.html |title=The Doors : Articles & Reviews Year 1967 |work=Mildequator.com |access-date=3 October 2012 |quote="The Doors are not pleasant, amusing hippies proffering a grin and a flower; they wield a knife with a cold and terrifying edge. The Doors are closely akin to the national taste for violence, and the power of their music forces each listener to realize what violence is in himself".... "The Doors met New York for better or for worse at a press conference in the gloomy vaulted wine cellar of the Delmonico hotel, the perfect room to honor the Gothic rock of the Doors". |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130504231130/http://mildequator.com/performancehistory/articlesreviews1967.html |archive-date=4 May 2013}}</ref> That same year, the ] song "]" created a kind of "mesmerizing gothic-rock masterpiece" according to music historian ].<ref>{{cite book |last=Loder |first=Kurt |date=December 1984 |title=V.U. |publisher=Verve Records |type=album liner notes|title-link=VU (album) }}</ref> In the late 1970s, the ''gothic'' adjective was used to describe the atmosphere of ] bands such as ], ], and ]. In a live review about a Siouxsie and the Banshees' concert in July 1978, critic ] wrote, concerning their music, "arallels and comparisons can now be drawn with gothic rock architects like the Doors and, certainly, early Velvet Underground".<ref name="Nick Kent">{{cite magazine|last=Kent|first=Nick|title= Banshees make the Breakthrough live review – London the Roundhouse 23 July 1978 |magazine=] |date=29 July 1978}}</ref> In March 1979, in his review of Magazine's second album '']'', Kent noted there was "a new austere sense of authority" in the music, with a "dank neo-Gothic sound".<ref name=magazine>{{cite magazine|last=Kent|first=Nick|title=Magazine's Mad Minstrels Gains Momentum (Album review) |magazine=]|date=31 March 1979|page= 31}}</ref> Later that year, the term was also used by Joy Division's manager, ] on 15 September in an interview for the BBC TV programme's '']''. Wilson described Joy Division as "gothic" compared to the pop mainstream, right before a live performance of the band.<ref>{{cite web |title=Something Else |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QMRZROGtm1Q | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211211/QMRZROGtm1Q| archive-date=2021-12-11 | url-status=live|publisher=BBC television |date=15 September 1979 |quote=Because it is unsettling, it is like sinister and gothic, it won't be played. }}{{cbignore}}</ref> The term was later applied to "newer bands such as ] who had arrived in the wake of Joy Division and Siouxsie and the Banshees".{{sfn|Reynolds|2005|p=352}} Bauhaus's first single issued in 1979, "]", is generally credited as the starting point of the gothic rock genre.{{sfn|Reynolds|2005|p=432}}


In 1979, ''Sounds'' described Joy Division as "Gothic" and "theatrical".<ref>{{cite journal |author=Des Moines |journal=Sounds |title=Live review by Des Moines (Joy Division Leeds) |date=26 October 1979 |quote=Curtis may project like an ambidextrous barman puging his physical hang-ups, but the 'Gothic dance music' he orchestrates is well-understood by those who recognise their New Wave frontiersmen and know how to dance the Joy Division! A theatrical sense of timing, controlled improvisation...}}</ref> In February 1980, '']'' qualified the same band as "masters of this Gothic gloom".<ref>{{cite journal |author=Bohn, Chris |title=Northern gloom: 2 Southern stomp: 1. (Joy Division: University of London Union – Live Review) |journal=Melody Maker |issue=16 February 1980 |quote=Joy Division are masters of this Gothic gloom}}</ref> Critic ] would later say that their singer ] wrote "the definitive Northern Gothic statement".<ref>{{cite magazine |author=Savage, Jon|author-link=Jon Savage |url=http://www.rocksbackpages.com/article.html?ArticleID=3124 |title=Joy Division: Someone Take These Dreams Away |magazine=] via ] (subscription required) |date=July 1994 |access-date=10 July 2014 |quote=a definitive Northern Gothic statement: guilt-ridden, romantic, claustrophobic}}</ref> However, it was not until the early 1980s that gothic rock became a coherent ] within post-punk, and followers of these bands started to come together as a distinctly recognizable movement. They may have taken the "goth" mantle from a 1981 article published in UK rock weekly '']'': "The face of Punk Gothique",<ref name=keat>{{cite journal |first=Steve|last= Keaton |title=The Face of Punk Gothique |journal= Sounds |date= 21 February 1981}}</ref> written by Steve Keaton. In a text about the audience of ], Keaton asked: "Could this be the coming of Punk Gothique? With Bauhaus flying in on similar wings could it be the next big thing?"<ref name=keat/> The ] night in ] in Northern England, which had opened in 1977 firstly as a punk club, became instrumental to the development of the goth subculture in the 1980s.<ref name="Evolution of Goth Culture">{{cite book |last1=Spracklen |first1=Karl |last2=Spracklen |first2=Beverley |title=The Evolution of Goth Culture: The Origins and Deeds of the New Goths |publisher=Emerald Publishing |year=2018 |pages=46 |quote="The F-Club and the Futurama festival, both set up and run by Leeds promoter, John Keenan, have become entrenched in the shared memory of post-punks and goths as spaces where goth rock was born in the form it is now known."}}<br />{{cite web |last1=Stewart |first1=Ethan |title=How Leeds Led Goth |url=https://www.popmatters.com/leeds-goth-2649733682.html |website=] |date=13 January 2021 |access-date=3 June 2021 }}<br />{{cite web |last1=Deboick |first1=Sophia |title=A City in Music – Leeds: Goth ground zero |url=https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/brexit-news/city-in-music-leeds-68820 |website=] |date=17 September 2020 |access-date=3 June 2021 |archive-date=22 January 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210122232818/https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/brexit-news/city-in-music-leeds-68820 |url-status=dead }}</ref> In July 1982, the opening of the ]<ref>{{cite news|last=Johnson|first=David|date=February 1983|title=69 Dean Street: The Making of Club Culture|page=26|work=The Face|issue=34|url=https://shapersofthe80s.com/clubbing/69-dean-street-and-the-making-of-uk-club-culture/|access-date=2018-04-07}}</ref> in ]'s ] provided a prominent meeting point for the emerging scene, which would be briefly labelled "positive punk" by the ''NME'' in a special issue with a front cover in early 1983.<ref name=north>{{cite magazine |author=North, Richard |title=Punk Warriors |magazine=] |date= 19 February 1983}}</ref> The term ''Batcaver'' was then used to describe old-school goths.
The limited number of bands that began the ] and ] scenes included ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], early ], and ].
]—live in concert, 3 February 2006]]


Outside the British scene, ] developed in ] during the late 1970s and early 1980s as a distinct branch of American ], with acts such as ], ] and ] at the forefront.<ref>{{cite news |first=Liz |last=Ohanesian |title=The LA Deathrock Starter Guide |newspaper=LA Weekly |date=4 November 2009 |url=http://www.laweekly.com/westcoastsound/2009/11/04/the-la-deathrock-starter-guide |access-date=10 July 2014 |archive-date=14 July 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140714221207/http://www.laweekly.com/westcoastsound/2009/11/04/the-la-deathrock-starter-guide |url-status=dead }}</ref>
By the mid-eighties, bands began proliferating and became increasingly popular, including ], ] (known as The Mission UK in the US), ], ], and ]. The nineties saw the further growth of eighties bands and emergence of many new bands. ], ] Records, and ] released much of this music in Europe, while ] among others released the music in the United States, where the subculture grew especially in ] and ] and Orange Counties, California, where many nightclubs featured "gothic/industrial" nights. The popularity of 4AD bands resulted in the creation of a similar US label called ], which produces what is colloquially termed ], a subgenre of ] music.


===Gothic genre===
By the mid-1990s, styles of music heard in goth venues ranged from ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ] and ].
The bands that defined and embraced the gothic rock genre included Bauhaus,{{sfn|Reynolds|2005|p=429}} early ],{{sfn|Reynolds|2005|p=421}} ],<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/pornography-mw0000199022 |title=''Pornography'' – The Cure : Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards : AllMusic |last=Mason |first=Stewart |work=] |access-date=27 October 2012}}</ref> ],{{sfn|Reynolds|2005|p=431}} ], ], ], ], ], ], and ].{{sfn|Reynolds|2005|p=435}} Near the peak of this first generation of the gothic scene in 1983, '']''{{'s}} ] recalled "several strong Gothic characteristics" in the music of Joy Division.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Rambali, Paul |title=A Rare Glimpse into A Private World |journal=The Face |issue=July 1983 |quote=Curtis' death wrapped an already mysterious group in legend. From the press eulogies, you would think Curtis had gone to join Chatterton, Rimbaud and Morrison in the hallowed hall of premature harvests. To a group with several strong Gothic characteristics was added a further piece of romance.}}</ref> In 1984, Joy Division's bassist ] named ] as one of their heirs: "If you listen to a band like Play Dead, who I really like, Joy Division played similar music to Play Dead."<ref>{{cite magazine |author=Houghton, Jayne |title= Crime Pays! |magazine=] |date= June 1984 |page=21}}</ref>


] of ]]]
]—Live in concert, February 3, 2006]]
By the mid-1980s, bands began proliferating and became increasingly popular, including ], ], ], ], ], ], and ]. Record labels like ], ] and ] released much of this music in Europe, and through a vibrant import music market in the US, the subculture grew, especially in ] and ], where many nightclubs featured "gothic/industrial" nights and bands like ], ], ] and ] became key figures for the genre to expand on an nationwide level.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://losangeleno.com/strange-days/goth-nights-los-angeles/|title=Dark Nights: Goth Didn't Die in the '80s — It's Multiplied|date=1 November 2019|website=Los Angeleno|access-date=21 January 2023|archive-date=21 January 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230121203733/https://losangeleno.com/strange-days/goth-nights-los-angeles/|url-status=dead}}</ref> The popularity of 4AD bands resulted in the creation of similar US labels, such as ] and ].
Recent years saw a resurgence in the early positive punk and ] sound, in reaction to ], ], and synthpop, which had taken over many goth clubs, bands with an earlier goth sound are becoming popular. Nights like Ghoul School and Release The Bats promote death rock, and the ] brings in death rock fans from around the world.


The 1990s saw further growth for some 1980s bands and the emergence of many new acts, as well as new goth-centric US record labels such as ], among others. According to Dave Simpson of '']'', "n the 90s, goths all but disappeared as ] became the dominant youth cult".<ref name="theguardian.com">{{cite news |last=Simpson |first=Dave |date=29 September 2006 |title=Back in black: Goth has risen from the dead – and the 1980s pioneers are (naturally) not happy about it |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2006/sep/29/popandrock |work=] |access-date=26 October 2022}}</ref> As a result, the goth movement went underground and fractured into ], ], ], ], and Medieval folk metal.<ref name="theguardian.com" /> ] was seen as a "goth-shock icon" by '']''.<ref>{{citation |last=Klosterman |first=Chuck |date=June 2003 |title=Who: Marilyn Manson |work=]}}</ref>
Today, the goth music scene thrives in ] (especially ]) with large festivals such as ], ], and others drawing tens of thousands of fans worldwide.<ref>{{cite web|author=Amorphous |url=http://www.darkplanet.eu/Gothic-and-Goth-Subculture-35973.html |title=Gothic and Goth Subculture—DarkIndependent.net |publisher=Darkplanet.eu |date= |accessdate=2009-04-25}}</ref>


==Historical and cultural influences== ==Art, historical and cultural influences==
The Goth subculture of the 1980s drew inspiration from a variety of sources. Some of them were modern or contemporary, others were centuries-old or ancient. Michael Bibby and Lauren M. E. Goodlad liken the subculture to a ].{{sfn|Goodlad|Bibby|2007}} Among the music-subcultures that influenced it were ], ], and ].{{sfn|Goodlad|Bibby|2007}} But it also drew inspiration from ]s, ], ]s, ] and traditional ]. Among the mythologies that proved influential in Goth were ], ], and various traditions of ].{{sfn|Goodlad|Bibby|2007}}
===Origins of the term===


The figures that the movement counted among its historic canon of ancestors were equally diverse. They included the ], ] (1844–1900), ] (1846–1870), ] (1904–1989) and ] (1905–1980).{{sfn|Goodlad|Bibby|2007}} Writers that have had a significant influence on the movement also represent a diverse canon. They include ] (1764–1823), ] (1795–1821), ] (1809–1849), ] (1814–1873), ] (1847–1912), ] (1854–1900), ] (1890–1937), ] (1941–2021), ] (1948–present), ] (1948–present), ] (1956–2021), and ] (1967–present).{{sfn|Goodlad|Bibby|2007}}
NME and Sounds reputedly took the term Gothic from Siouxsie Sioux (of the Banshees) who used it to describe the new direction for her band. However the earliest significant usage of the term (as applied to music) was by Anthony H. Wilson on a 1978 BBC TV program when he described Joy Division as Gothic compared to the pop mainstream. Bauhaus was labeled as Gothic as early as 1979 when they released Bela Lugosi's Dead.<ref>http://www.gothicsubculture.com/origin.php</ref>


===19th and 20th centuries=== ===18th and 19th centuries===
]'s '']'' (1818) has come to define Gothic fiction in the ]. ] to 1831 edition shown.]]


] is a genre of fiction that combines romance and dark elements to produce mystery, suspense, terror, horror and the supernatural. According to David H. Richter, settings were framed to take place at "...ruinous castles, gloomy churchyards, claustrophobic monasteries, and lonely mountain roads". Typical characters consisted of the cruel parent, sinister priest, courageous victor, and the helpless heroine, along with supernatural figures such as ]s, ]s, ]s, and ]s. Often, the plot focused on characters ill-fated, internally conflicted, and innocently victimized by harassing malicious figures. In addition to the dismal plot focuses, the literary tradition of the gothic was to also focus on individual characters that were gradually going insane.{{sfn|Richter|1987}}
The Revolutionary War-era "American Gothic" story of the ], immortalized in ]'s story "]" (published in 1820), marked the arrival in the New World of dark, romantic story-telling. The tale was composed by Irving while he was living in England, and was based on popular tales told by colonial Dutch settlers of New York's Hudson River valley. The story was adapted to film in 1922, and in 1949, in the animated '']''. It was readapted in 1980 and again in ]'s 1999 '']''. Burton, already famous through his films '']'', '']'', and '']'', created a storybook atmosphere filled with darkness and shadow.


English author ], with his 1764 novel '']'' is one of the first writers who explored this genre. The ]-era "American Gothic" story of the ], immortalized in "]" (published in 1820) by ], marked the arrival in the New World of dark, romantic storytelling. The tale was composed by Irving while he was living in England, and was based on popular tales told by colonial Dutch settlers of the ], ]. The story would be ],{{sfn|Koszarski|1994|p=140}} in 1949 as the animated '']'',<ref>"The American Film Institute, catalog of motion pictures, Volume 1, Part 1, Feature films 1941–1950, The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr Toad"</ref> and again in 1999.<ref>{{cite news | author = Roger Ebert | url = http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19991119/REVIEWS/911190303 | title = Sleepy Hollow | work = ] | date = 19 November 1999 | access-date = 1 November 2010 | author-link = Roger Ebert | archive-date = 22 July 2012 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120722194140/http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19991119/REVIEWS/911190303 | url-status = dead }}</ref>
Throughout the evolution of goth subculture, classic romantic, gothic and horror literature has played a significant role. ], ], ], ] and other tragic and romantic writers have become as emblematic of the subculture as has using dark eyeliner or dressing in black. Baudelaire, in fact, in his preface to '']'' (''Flowers of Evil'') penned lines that as much as anything can serve as a sort of goth malediction:


Throughout the evolution of the goth subculture, classic Romantic, Gothic and horror literature has played a significant role. ] (1776–1822), ]<ref name="Simpson">{{cite news |first=Dave |last=Simpson |title= Back in black: Goth has risen from the dead – and the 1980s pioneers are (naturally) not happy about it |newspaper=The Guardian |date= 29 September 2006 |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2006/sep/29/popandrock |access-date= 14 July 2014}} "Severin admits his band (]) pored over gothic literature – ] and ]".</ref> (1809–1849), ] (1821–1867),<ref name="Simpson"/> ] (1890–1937), and other tragic and Romantic writers have become as emblematic of the subculture{{sfn|Goodlad|Bibby|2007|p=14}} as the use of dark eyeliner or dressing in black. Baudelaire, in fact, in his preface to '']'' (''Flowers of Evil'') penned lines that could serve as a sort of goth malediction:{{sfn|Kilpatrick|2004|p=210}}
:''C'est l'Ennui! —l'œil chargé d'un pleur involontaire,''
:''Il rêve d'échafauds en fumant son houka.''
:''Tu le connais, lecteur, ce monstre délicat,''
:''&mdash;Hypocrite lecteur,&mdash;mon semblable,&mdash;mon frère!''


<blockquote><poem>''C'est l'Ennui! —l'œil chargé d'un pleur involontaire,''
:It is Boredom! — an eye brimming with an involuntary tear,
''Il rêve d'échafauds en fumant son houka.''
:He dreams of the gallows while smoking his water-pipe.
''Tu le connais, lecteur, ce monstre délicat,''
:You know him, reader, this fragile monster,
''—Hypocrite lecteur,—mon semblable,—mon frère!''
:&mdash;Hypocrite reader,&mdash;my twin,&mdash;my brother!

It is Boredom! — an eye brimming with an involuntary tear,
He dreams of the gallows while smoking his water-pipe.
You know him, reader, this delicate monster,
—Hypocrite reader,—my twin,—my brother!</poem></blockquote>

====Visual art influences====
]'' (1851) by ]]]

The gothic subculture has influenced different artists—not only musicians—but also painters and photographers. In particular their work is based on mystic, morbid and romantic motifs. In photography and painting the spectrum varies from erotic artwork to romantic images of vampires or ghosts. There is a marked preference for dark colours and sentiments, similar to Gothic fiction. At the end of the 19th century, painters like ] and ] invented a new kind of Gothic.{{sfn|Spuybroek|2011|p=42}}


===20th century influences=== ===20th century influences===
{{Expand section|date=October 2017}}
Some people credit ], perhaps best known for his 1956 song "]", as a foundation of modern goth style and music.{{sfn|Kilpatrick|2004|p=88}} Some people credit the band Bauhaus' first single "]", released in August 1979, with the start of goth subculture.{{sfn|Reynolds|2005|p=432}}


In the early 90s, ], fronted by vocalist ], pioneered the 'Riot Goth' sound, combining elements of the goth and ] genres. Through their lyrics, the band tackled issues such as misogyny and racism, giving them significant underground appeal.<ref>{{cite web |last=Ewens |first=Hannah Rose |date=December 1, 2015 |title=The zine sharing feminist stories to keep riot goth alive {{!}} Dazed |url=https://www.dazeddigital.com/music/article/28657/1/the-zine-sharing-feminist-stories-to-keep-riot-goth-alive |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150719095623/https://www.dazeddigital.com/music/article/28657/1/the-zine-sharing-feminist-stories-to-keep-riot-goth-alive |archive-date=July 19, 2015 |access-date=April 23, 2023 |website=]}}"</ref><ref>{{cite web |last=Pettigrew |first=Jason |date=17 July 2015 |title=Legendary riot-goths Jack Off Jill cheat death again to reform for one night – Alternative Press |url=http://www.altpress.com/features/entry/legendary_riot_goths_jack_off_jill_cheat_death_again_to_reform_for_one_nigh |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150719095623/http://www.altpress.com/features/entry/legendary_riot_goths_jack_off_jill_cheat_death_again_to_reform_for_one_nigh |archive-date=19 July 2015 |access-date=17 July 2015 |website=]}}"</ref><ref name="theguardian.com" />
The influence of the gothic novel on the goth subculture can be seen in numerous examples of the subculture's poetry and music, though this influence sometimes came second hand, through the popular imagery of ] and television. The powerful imagery of horror films began in ] after the first world war and then passed onto the ] films of the twenties and thirties, and then to the horror films of the English ].


===21st century influences===
By the 1960s, ] series, such as '']'' and '']'', used these stereotypes for camp comedy. The ], in particular, was a key precursor to the male goth image, while Dracula's iconic portrayal by ] appealed powerfully to early goths. They were attracted by Lugosi's aura of camp menace, elegance and mystique. Some people credit the band ]' first single "]", released August 1979, with the start of the goth subculture, though many prior art house movements influenced gothic fashion and style, the illustrations and paintings of Swiss artist, ] being one of the earliest. Other notable examples include ] of the musical group ], ] of ], and ] of the band ]. Some members of Bauhaus were, themselves, fine art students or active artists.
{{Expand section|date=October 2017}}
The ] '']'' featured a recurring goth character named ], played by ]. Fielding said in an interview that he himself had been a goth at age fifteen and that he had a series of goth girlfriends. This was the first time he dabbled in makeup. Fielding said that he loved his girlfriends dressing him up.<ref>. ''The Guardian''. Author – Simon Hattenstone. Published 1 February 2013. Retrieved 28 July 2017.</ref>


The game '']'' (2020) by ] is about "two versions of Goths – the ancient Roman peoples and the black-clad teenagers" and is set in LA in the 1990s.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-06-06 |title=Queer Games Bundle strives to earn a living wage for marginalized artists in the tabletop RPG space |url=https://www.dicebreaker.com/topics/bundle/news/queer-games-bundle-2022-itchio |access-date=2023-03-25 |website=Dicebreaker |language=en}}</ref>
]'', a key influence in the early days of the goth subculture.]]
Some of the early ] and ] artists adopted traditional horror film images and drew on horror film soundtracks for inspiration. Their audiences responded by adopting appropriate dress and props. Use of standard horror film props like swirling smoke, rubber bats, and cobwebs featured as gothic club décor from the beginning in The Batcave. Such references in their music and image were originally ], but as time went on, bands and members of the subculture took the connection more seriously. As a result, morbid, ], and ] themes became more noticeably serious in the subculture. The interconnection between horror and goth was highlighted in its early days by '']'', a 1983 vampire film, which starred ], ], and ]. The film featured gothic rock group Bauhaus performing '']'' in a nightclub. In 1993, ] became the location for what became the UK's biggest goth festival as a direct result of being featured in Bram Stoker's ''Dracula''.<ref>{{cite web| url = http://www.whitbyonline.co.uk/whitbyhistory/whitbygothfestivals.php | title = Whitby Goth Weekend & Other Festivals | work = Whitby Online | accessdate = 8 September 2011}}</ref>


==Characteristics of the scene==
====Postmodernism====
===Icons===
Goth icons include several bandleaders: ], of Siouxsie and the Banshees; ], of the Cure; ], of Bauhaus; ], of The Damned; ], of Christian Death; Olli Wisdom, leader of the band ]<ref>{{cite news| url=https://shapersofthe80s.com/clubbing/69-dean-street-and-the-making-of-uk-club-culture/ | work=The Face (issue 34, page 26, republished at Shapersofthe80s.com)| first=David | last=Johnson | title= 69 Dean Street: The Making of Club Culture | date=1983-02-01 |access-date=2018-04-07}}</ref> and keyboardist Jonathan Melton aka Jonny Slut, who evolved the ] style.<ref>Harriman, Andi; Bontje, Marloes: ''Some Wear Leather, Some Wear Lace. The Worldwide Compendium of Post Punk and Goth in the 1980s'', Intellect Books 2014, {{ISBN|1-783-20352-8}}, p. 66</ref> ] was dubbed as "the grand lord of gothic lushness".<ref>{{cite web |first=Jenny |last=Stevens |url=https://www.nme.com/reviews/nick-cave-and-the-bad-seeds/14083#6mWxcBmKK4eyCeDd.99 |title=Push The Sky Away |work= NME |date=15 February 2013 |access-date=21 February 2013}}</ref>


===Fashion===
A literary influence on the gothic scene was ]'s re-imagining of the idea of the ]. Rice's characters were depicted as struggling with eternity and loneliness. Their ambivalent or tragic sexuality held deep attractions for many goth readers, making her works popular in the eighties through the nineties.
{{main|Gothic fashion}}
]


====Influences====
The re-imagining of the vampire continued with the release of ]'s book '']'' in October 1992. Despite the fact that Brite's first novel was criticized by some mainstream sources for allegedly "lack a moral center: neither terrifyingly malevolent supernatural creatures nor (like Anne Rice's protagonists) tortured souls torn between good and evil, these vampires simply add blood-drinking to the amoral panoply of drug abuse, problem drinking and empty sex practiced by their human counterparts"{{Volume needed|date=February 2010}}, many of these so-called "human counterparts" identified with the teen angst and goth music references therein, keeping the book in print. Upon release of a special 10th Anniversary edition of Lost Souls, ]— the same periodical that criticized the novel's "amorality" a decade prior— deemed it a "modern horror classic" and acknowledged that Brite established a "cult audience."<ref>http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA246975.html?q=poppy+z%2E+brite+lost+souls</ref>
One female role model is ], the 1910s ] known for her dark eyeshadow.<ref>{{harvnb|Hannaham|1997|p=93}}</ref><ref name="steele26">{{harvnb|Steele|Park|2008|p=26}}</ref> In 1977, ] hosted the Soirée Moratoire Noir party, specifying "tenue tragique noire absolument obligatoire" (black tragic dress absolutely required).<ref name=steele35>{{harvnb|Steele|Park|2008|p=35}}</ref> The event included elements associated with ] style.<ref name=steele35/>


] was particularly influential on the dress style of the ] scene; ] of '']'' described ]' 1980 gig at Futurama: " modeling her newest outfit, the one that will influence how all the girls dress over the next few months. About half the girls at Leeds had used Sioux as a basis for their appearance, hair to ankle".<ref>Reynolds, p. 425.</ref> ],<ref>{{harvnb|Hannaham|1997|p=113}}</ref> ], ],<ref>{{harvnb|Steele|Park|2008|p=18}}</ref> ], ], ],<ref name=steele26/> ], ], ]<ref name=grunenberg2/> and ]<ref name=grunenberg2/> are also style icons.
===Later media influences===


The 1980s established designers such as ], and the 1990s saw a surge of US-based ] designers, many of whom continue to evolve the style to the present day. Style magazines such as '']'' have given repeat features to a select few gothic fashion designers who began their labels in the 1990s, such as Kambriel, ], and Tyler Ondine of Heavy Red.<ref>{{cite web |last=Holiday |first=Steven |date= 12 December 2014 |title= Gothic Beauty |url= http://www.gothicbeauty.com |location= Portland, OR |publisher=Holiday Media |access-date= 12 December 2014 }}</ref>
As the subculture became well-established, the connection between goth and horror fiction became almost a cliché, with goths quite likely to appear as characters in horror novels and film. For example, '']'' drew directly on goth music and style. ]'s acclaimed graphic novel series '']'' influenced goths with characters like the dark, brooding ] and his sister ].


American model ] who has been known for her goth aesthetic, has been at the forefront of what has been dubbed the "Succubus Chic" trend of 2023.<ref>{{Cite web |first=Natalie |last=Michie |date=2023-02-03 |title=Skinny Eyebrows Are the Latest '90s Beauty Trend to Return |url=https://fashionmagazine.com/beauty-grooming/skinny-eyebrows/ |access-date=2023-09-11 |website=FASHION Magazine |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Dazed |date=2023-01-09 |title=Succubus chic: get to know the deadly new It Girl |url=https://www.dazeddigital.com/beauty/article/57887/1/succubus-chic-2023-new-it-girl-angelina-jolie-kylie-jenner-arca-ghoul-girl |access-date=2023-09-11 |website=Dazed |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=What is the succubus-chic aesthetic? |url=https://www.harpersbazaar.in/beauty/story/what-is-the-succubus-chic-aesthetic-564914-2023-01-12 |access-date=2023-09-11 |website=Harper Bazar |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-05-12 |title=Succubus chic, la tendencia de TikTok que representa el ideal más antiguo (y problemático) |url=https://www.vogue.es/articulos/succubus-chic-tiktok-enfermedad-historia-arte |access-date=2023-09-11 |website=Vogue España |language=es-ES}}</ref>
]'s 2002 release ''21st Century Goth'' explores the modern state of the goth scene around the world, including ], ], and mainland ]. His previous 1997 release, ''Hex Files: The Goth Bible'' similarly took an international look at the subculture.


===Visual art influences=== ====Styling====
Gothic fashion is marked by conspicuously dark, antiquated, and homogeneous features. It is stereotyped as eerie, mysterious, complex, and exotic.<ref name= lr>{{cite news |author=La Ferla, Ruth |title=Embrace the Darkness |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/10/30/fashion/sundaystyles/30GOTH.html |work=The New York Times |date=30 October 2005 |access-date=25 January 2012}}</ref> A dark, sometimes morbid fashion and style of ],<ref name="grunenberg2">{{harvnb|Grunenberg|1997|p=172}}</ref> typical gothic fashion includes ] black hair and black period-styled clothing.<ref name="grunenberg2" /> Both male and female goths can wear dark ] and dark fingernail polish, most especially black. Styles are often borrowed from ] and—more currently—from the ] and ] periods.<ref name=grunenberg2/> It also frequently expresses pagan, occult or other ].<ref name = "ELipton1">Eric Lipton from the Chicago Tribune, 27 April 1999</ref> Gothic fashion and styling may also feature ] jewelry and piercings.
] photographer ] at ] in 2005]]


]
The goth subculture has influenced different artists—not only musicians—but also painters and photographers. In particular their work is based on mystic, morbid and romantic motifs. In photography and painting the spectrum varies from erotic artwork to romantic images of vampires or ghosts. To be present is a marked preference for dark colours and sentiments, similar to ], ] or ]. In the Fine Art field, ] is a well known goth artist with her dark, nocturnal works and strong gothic imagery. Often, goth visual art goes hand in hand with ], such as artist ] whose gothic artwork is predominantly used by bands and nightclubs.
] described goth fashion as a "profusion of black velvets, lace, fishnets and leather tinged with scarlet or purple, accessorized with tightly laced corsets, gloves, precarious stilettos and silver jewelry depicting religious or occult themes".<ref>{{cite book |last=Polhemus |first=Ted |author-link=Ted Polhemus |year=1994 |title=Street Style |location=London |publisher=Thames & Hudson |page=97}} Cited in {{harvnb|Mellins|2013|pp=17–18}}.</ref> Of the male "goth look", goth historian Pete Scathe draws a distinction between the Sid Vicious archetype of black spiky hair and black leather jacket in contrast to the gender ambiguous individuals wearing makeup. The first is the early goth gig-going look, which was essentially punk, whereas the second evolved into the Batcave nightclub look. Early goth gigs were often very hectic affairs, and the audience dressed accordingly.


In contrast to the ]-based Victorian and Elizabethan pomposity of the 2000s, the more Romantic side of 1980s trad-goth—mainly represented by women—was characterized by new wave/post-punk-oriented hairstyles (both long and short, partly shaved and teased) and street-compliant clothing, including black frill blouses, midi dresses or tea-length skirts, and floral lace tights, ], spike heels (pumps), and pointed-toe buckle boots (]), sometimes supplemented with accessories such as bracelets, chokers and bib necklaces. This style, retroactively referred to as ''Ethergoth'', took its inspiration from Siouxsie Sioux and mid-1980s musicians from the 4AD roster like ] and ].<ref>Aurelio Voltaire Hernandez: ''What Is Goth?'', Publishers Group UK, {{ISBN|1-578-63322-2}}<br />''"Serene, thoughtful and creative, ethergoths are defined by their affinity ... darkwave and classically inspired Gothic music. Ethergoths are more likely to be found sipping tea, writing poetry and listening to the Cocteau Twins than jumping up and down at a club."''</ref>
Some of the graphic artists close to goth are ], ], ], ], ] as well as the American comic artist ]. ] of Switzerland is one of the first graphic artists to make serious contributions to the gothic/industrial look of much of modern cinema with his work on the film "Alien" by Ridley Scott.


'']'' noted: "The costumes and ornaments are a glamorous cover for the genre's somber themes. In the world of Goth, nature itself lurks as a malign protagonist, causing flesh to rot, rivers to flood, monuments to crumble and women to turn into slatterns, their hair streaming and lipstick askew".<ref name= lr/>
==Ideology==
{{section OR|date=May 2011}}
Defining an explicit ideology for the gothic subculture is difficult for several reasons. First is the overwhelming importance of ''mood'' and '']'' for those involved. This is, in part, inspired by ] and ]. The allure for goths of dark, mysterious, and morbid imagery and mood lies in the same tradition of Romanticism's ]. During the late 18th and 19th century, feelings of horror and supernatural dread were widespread motifs in popular literature; the process continues in the modern horror film. Balancing this emphasis on mood and ], another central element of the gothic is a deliberate sense of ] theatricality and self-dramatization, present both in gothic literature as well as in the gothic subculture itself.


Cintra Wilson declares that the origins of the dark romantic style are found in the "] cult of mourning".<ref name="cintra">{{cite news |last=Wilson |first=Cintra |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/18/fashion/18GOTH.html |title=You just can't kill it |work=] |date=17 September 2008 |access-date=18 September 2008}}</ref> ] is an expert in the history of the style.<ref name="cintra" />
Goths, in terms of their membership in the subculture, are usually not supportive of violence, but are tolerant of alternative lifestyles that incorporate themes such as BDSM—always involving consent. Violence and hate do not form elements of goth ideology; rather, the ideology is formed in part by recognition, identification, and grief over societal and personal evils that the mainstream culture wishes to ignore or forget. These are the prevalent themes in goth music.<ref name="Robinson">]'s article on ""</ref>


====Reciprocity====
The second impediment to explicitly defining a gothic ideology is goth's generally apolitical nature. While individual defiance of social norms was socially risky in the 19th century, today it is far less socially radical. Thus, the significance of goth's subcultural rebellion is limited, and it draws on imagery at the heart of Western culture. Unlike the ] or ] movements, the goth subculture has no pronounced political messages or cries for social activism. The subculture is marked by its emphasis on individualism, tolerance for diversity, and mild tendencies towards intellectualism and ], but even these ideas are not universal to all goths. Goth ideology is based far more on ] and simplified ] than ].{{citation needed|date=May 2011}}
]
Goth fashion has a reciprocal relationship with the fashion world. In the later part of the first decade of the 21st century, designers such as ],<ref name="cintra" /><ref name=grunenberg/><ref name=steele3>{{harvnb|Steele|Park|2008|p=3}}</ref> ],<ref>{{cite book |last=Bolton |first=Andrew |author-link=Andrew Bolton (curator) |date=2013 |title=Anna Sui |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=veh5m5QdWL8C&q=anna+sui |location=New York |publisher=Chronicle Books |pages=100–109 |isbn=978-1452128597 |via=Google Books}}</ref> ],<ref name=steele3/> ], ], ], ], ], ],<ref name="cintra" /><ref name=grunenberg/><ref name=steele3/> ]<ref name=steele3/><ref name="laferla">La Ferla, Ruth: "Embrace the Darkness". ''New York Times'', 30 October 2005.
</ref> and ]<ref name=steele3/> brought elements of goth to runways.<ref name="cintra" /> This was described as "Haute Goth" by Cintra Wilson in the ''New York Times''.<ref name="cintra" />


], ], ]<ref name= lr/> and ] have also been associated with the fashion trend.<ref name="cintra" /><ref name=grunenberg>{{harvnb|Grunenberg|1997|p=173}}</ref> In Spring 2004, ], Jean Paul Gaultier, ] and ] dressed their models as "glamorous ghouls dressed in form-fitting suits and coal-tinted cocktail dresses".<ref name=laferla/> Swedish designer Helena Horstedt and jewelry artist Hanna Hedman also practice a goth aesthetic.<ref>Johanna Lenander, "Swede and Sour: Scandinavian Goth," ''New York Times: T Magazine'', 27 March 2009. Access date: 29 March 2009.</ref>
Unlike punk, there are few clashes between political affiliation and being "goth". Similarly, there is no common religious tie that binds together the goth movement, though spiritual, supernatural, and religious imagery has played a part in gothic fashion, song lyrics and visual art. In particular, aesthetic elements from ] often appear in goth culture. Reasons for donning such imagery range from expression of religious affiliation to satire or simply decorative effect. Regardless, there is a general tolerance for religious beliefs, and everyone including strict Catholics, atheists, and polytheists are accepted.<ref name="Robinson"/>


===Films and television===
While involvement with the subculture can be fulfilling, it also can be risky depending on where the goth lives, especially for the young, because of the negative attention it can attract due to public misconceptions of goth subculture. The value that young people find in the movement is evinced by its continuing existence after other subcultures of the eighties (such as the ]) have died out.
{{main|Gothic film}}
{{more citations needed section|date=June 2016}}
]'', an influence in the early days of the goth subculture{{sfn|Ladouceur|2011|pp=137–138}}]]
Some of the early gothic rock and deathrock artists adopted traditional horror film images and drew on horror film soundtracks for inspiration. Their audience responded by adopting appropriate dress and props. Use of standard horror film props such as swirling smoke, rubber bats, and cobwebs featured as gothic club décor from the beginning in The Batcave. Such references in bands' music and images were originally ], but as time went on, bands and members of the subculture took the connection more seriously. As a result, morbid, ] and ] themes became more noticeably serious in the subculture. The interconnection between horror and goth was highlighted in its early days by '']'', a 1983 vampire film starring ], ] and ]. The film featured gothic rock group Bauhaus performing ''Bela Lugosi's Dead'' in a nightclub. ] created a storybook atmosphere filled with darkness and shadow in some of his films like '']'' (1988), '']'' (1989), '']'' (1990), '']'' (1992) and the ] films '']'' (1993), which was produced/co-written by Burton, and '']'' (2005), which he co-produced. The ] cartoon '']'' is also based on the goth subculture.


As the subculture became well-established, the connection between goth and horror fiction became almost a cliché, with goths quite likely to appear as characters in horror novels and film. For example, '']'', '']'', '']'' and '']'' film series drew directly on goth music and style. The dark comedies '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'', and a few episodes of the animated TV show '']'' portray or parody the goth subculture. In ''South Park'', several of the fictional schoolchildren are depicted as goths. The goth kids on the show are depicted as finding it annoying to be confused with the ] "]" kids from the episode "]" in season 12,<ref>Modell, Josh (19 November 2008). "The Ungroundable". ''The A.V. Club''.</ref><ref>Fickett, Travis (20 November 2008). "IGN: The Ungroundable Review". IGN. News Corporation. Retrieved 2008-11-23.</ref> and even more frustrating to be compared with ] kids. The goth kids are usually depicted listening to gothic music, writing or reading Gothic poetry, drinking coffee, flipping their hair, and smoking.<ref>{{cite web|first=Josh|last=Modell|title=The Ungroundable|website=]|url=https://www.avclub.com/south-park-the-ungroundable-1798205248|date=November 19, 2008|accessdate=29 January 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://southpark.cc.com/fans/faq/archives.php?id=16431 |title=FAQ Archives: Why aren't the goth kids in the class w/ the rest of the kids when they show them all at their desk? |access-date=2008-11-23 |date=2004-05-06 |work=South Park Studios |archive-date=6 March 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090306191502/http://www.southparkstudios.com/fans/faq/archives.php?id=16431 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
==Fashion==
{{Main|Gothic fashion}}
]
Goth fashion is stereotyped as a dark, sometimes morbid, eroticized fashion and style of ]. Typical gothic fashion includes dyed black hair, dark eyeliner, black fingernails, black period-styled clothing; goths may or may not have piercings. Styles are often borrowed from the ], ] or ] period and often express pagan, occult or other religious imagery such as ]s or ]s.<ref name="Robinson"/><ref name = "ELipton1">Eric Lipton from the Chicago Tribune, April 27, 1999</ref> The extent to which goths hold to this style varies amongst individuals as well as ], though virtually all goths wear some of these elements. ], such as ] and ], have also been described as practicing "Haute Goth".<ref name=cintra/>
Goth fashion is often confused with ] and ] fashion:<ref> ''Scathe.demon.co.uk''. Retrieved July 19, 2008.</ref> outsiders often mistake fans of heavy metal for goth, particularly those who wear black trench coats or wear "]" (a term associated with the ] music scene).


] from ] created by ] is a fictional character and the mother in the Addams Family. Morticia was played by ] in the 1964 television show ] and by ] in the ], and voiced by ] in ].
==Controversy==


A recurring sketch in the 1990s on NBC's '']'' was ''Goth Talk'', in which a public access channel broadcast hosted by unpopular young goths would continually be interrupted by the more "normal" kids in school. The sketch featured series regulars ], ], and ].
The gothic fascination with the ] has raised public concerns regarding the psychological well-being of goths. The ] has made reports that have influenced the public view that goths, or people associated with the subculture, are malicious; however this is disputed and the goth subculture is often described as non-violent.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn8996-goth-subculture-may-protect-vulnerable-children.html |title=Goth subculture may protect vulnerable children |work=New Scientist |date=14 April 2006 |accessdate=2009-04-25}}</ref> Two non peer-reviewed studies by the A.S.H.A. concluded a higher than average propensity toward violence, and for one of the papers, ], within the subculture, although the studies use crude definitions, methodology and logic to support these assertions. <ref>http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/121371835/abstract?CRETRY=1&SRETRY=0</ref><ref>http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/123358363/abstract</ref> Some individuals who have either identified themselves or been identified by others as goth, whether correctly or incorrectly, have committed high profile ]s, including several ]s. These incidents and their attribution to the goth scene have helped to propagate a wary perception of goth in the public eye.<ref name="ELipton1"/><ref name = "czfeyy">Marcia Montenegro Christian Answers for the New Age</ref>
], run on the cover of the '']''. The picture on the right, of Dyleski in the ninth grade, which shows him in makeup and long hair, was criticized by ] as unfair and misleading, because by fall 2006 Dyleski's appearance had become more conservative and mainstream. The Dyleski trial sparked controversy over the goth scene.]]


===Violence attributed to goths=== ===Books and magazines===
{{Main|Gothic fiction}}
A prominent American literary influence on the gothic scene was provided by ]'s re-imagining of the vampire in 1976. In '']'', Rice's characters were depicted as self-tormentors who struggled with alienation, loneliness, and the human condition. Not only did the characters torment themselves, but they also depicted a surreal world that focused on uncovering its splendour. These Chronicles assumed goth attitudes, but they were not intentionally created to represent the gothic subculture. Their romance, beauty, and erotic appeal attracted
many goth readers, making her works popular from the 1980s through the 1990s.{{sfn|Jones|2015|pp=179–204}} While Goth has embraced ] both in its 19th century form and in its later incarnations, Rice's ] take on the vampire mythos has had a "special resonance" in the subculture. Her vampire novels feature intense emotions, period clothing, and "cultured decadence". Her vampires are ] monsters, but they are also stunningly attractive. Rice's goth readers tend to envision themselves in much the same terms and view characters like ] as ]s.{{sfn|Goodlad|Bibby|2007}}


]'s novel '']'' contains gothic imagery and themes that demonstrate the links between blackness and the gothic; themes and images of "premonitions, curses, prophecies, spells, veils, demonic possessions, graves, skeletons" are present, suggesting gothic influence.<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal|last=Smethurst|first=James|date=Spring 2001|title=Invented by Horror: The Gothic and African American Literary Ideology in Native Son|journal=African American Review|volume=35|issue=1|pages=29–30|doi=10.2307/2903332|jstor=2903332}}</ref> Other classic themes of the gothic are present in the novel, such as transgression and unstable identities of race, class, gender, and nationality.<ref name=":1" />
Public concern with the goth subculture reached a high point in the fallout of the ] that was carried out by two students, incorrectly associated with the goth subculture. This misreporting of the roots of the massacre caused a widespread public backlash against the North American goth scene. Investigators of the incident, five months later, stated that there was no involvement between the goth subculture and the killers, who held goth music in contempt.<ref></ref>


The re-imagining of the vampire continued with the release of ]'s book '']'' in October 1992. Despite the fact that Brite's first novel was criticized by some mainstream sources for allegedly "lack a moral center: neither terrifyingly malevolent supernatural creatures nor (like Anne Rice's protagonists) tortured souls torn between good and evil, these vampires simply add blood-drinking to the amoral panoply of drug abuse, problem drinking and empty sex practiced by their human counterparts",<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.publishersweekly.com/978-0-385-30875-5 |title=Fiction Book Review: Lost Souls by Poppy Z. Brite |work=publishersweekly.com|date=31 August 1992 |access-date=18 March 2012}}</ref> many of these so-called "human counterparts" identified with the teen angst and goth music references therein, keeping the book in print. Upon release of a special 10th anniversary edition of ''Lost Souls'', '']''—the same periodical that criticized the novel's "amorality" a decade prior—deemed it a "modern horror classic" and acknowledged that Brite established a "cult audience".<ref>{{cite web |title=Fiction review: The American Fantasy Tradition by Brian M. Thomsen |url=http://www.publishersweekly.com/978-0-7653-0152-9 |work=publishersweekly.com |date=1 September 2002 |access-date=18 March 2012}}</ref>
The ], in Canada, also raised public concern with the goth scene. ], who killed one and injured nineteen, maintained an online journal at a web site, , in which he "portrayed himself as a gun-loving Goth."<ref name="side-line_Gill">September 14, 2006. Side-line.com. Retrieved on March 13, 2007.</ref> The day after the shooting it was reported that "it are rough times for industrial / goth music fans these days as a result of yet another trench coat killing", implying that Gill was involved in the goth subculture.<ref name="side-line_Gill"/> During a search of Gill's home, police found a letter praising the actions of ] ] and a CD titled "Shooting sprees ain't no fun without ] and friends LOL".<ref>{{cite news | author = CTV News | title = Details of Kimveer Gill's apology note revealed | url = http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20070320/gill_note_070320/20070320/ | date = March 20, 2007 }}</ref> Although the shooter claimed an obsession for "Goth", his favorite music list was described, by the media, as a "who's who of heavy metal.<ref name='VF_Gill_detail'>Kimveer Gill's VampireFreaks.com profile.</ref><ref>Singh, Raman . NRI Retrieved on March 22, 2007.</ref>


], author, noted music journalist, and world's leading historian of ]<ref>Blu Starvox.net</ref><ref>Kyshah Hell Morbidoutlook.com</ref><ref> Broken Ankle Books</ref> stated, of ], that he was "not a Goth. Never a Goth. The bands he listed as his chosen form of ear-bashing were relentlessly ] and standard ], ] and ], with some ] presence.", "Kimveer Gill listened to metal." "He had nothing whatsoever to do with Goth," and further commented "I realise that like many Neos this idiot may even have believed he somehow was a Goth, because they're only really noted for spectacularly missing the point." Mercer emphasized that he was not blaming ] for Gill's actions and added "It doesn't matter actually what music he liked."<ref>Mick Mercer mickmercer.livejournal.com</ref> The 2002 release ''21st Century Goth'' by ], an author, noted music journalist and leading historian of gothic rock,<ref>Blu Starvox.net</ref><ref>Kyshah Hell Morbidoutlook.com</ref><ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070409035909/http://brokenanklebooks.com/AuthorsMercer.htm |date=9 April 2007 }} Broken Ankle Books</ref> explored the modern state of the goth scene around the world, including ], ], and mainland ]. His previous 1997 release, ''Hex Files: The Goth Bible'', similarly took an international look at the subculture.


In the US, '']'' was a gothic subculture magazine founded in 1982. In Italy, ''Ver Sacrum'' covers the Italian goth scene, including fashion, sexuality, music, art and literature. Some magazines, such as the now-defunct ''Dark Realms''<ref>''''</ref> and ''Goth Is Dead'' included goth fiction and poetry. Other magazines cover fashion (e.g., '']''); music (e.g., ''Severance'') or culture and lifestyle (e.g., ''Althaus'' e-zine).
Another school shooting that was wrongly attributed to the goth subculture is the ].<ref>, '']'' (subscription required)</ref> ] killed 7 people, and was believed by a fellow student to be into the goth culture: wearing "a big old black trench coat," and listening to ] (as opposed to ]). Weise was also found to participate in ] online forums.<ref>NBC, MSNBC and news services MSNBC</ref>


On 31 October 2011, ] published the ''Encyclopedia Gothica''<ref>{{Cite book|title=Encyclopedia Gothica|last=Liisa.|first=Ladouceur|date=2011|publisher=ECW Press|others=Pullin, Gary.|isbn=978-1770410244|location=Toronto|oclc=707327955}}</ref> written by author and poet Liisa Ladouceur with illustrations done by Gary Pullin.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://nationalpost.com/afterword/book-review-encyclopedia-gothica-by-liisa-ladouceur|title=Book Review: Encyclopedia Gothica, by Liisa Ladouceur|date=2011-11-11|work=National Post|access-date=2018-03-07|language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.houstonpress.com/arts/encyclopedia-gothica-liisa-ladouceur-explains-it-all-6380980|title=Encyclopedia Gothica: Liisa Ladouceur Explains It All|last=Rouner|first=Jef|date=2011-10-28|work=Houston Press|access-date=2018-03-07|archive-date=7 March 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180307151049/http://www.houstonpress.com/arts/encyclopedia-gothica-liisa-ladouceur-explains-it-all-6380980|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.terrorizer.com/dominion/ater-liber/book-review-encyclopedia-gothica-liisa-ladouceur/|title=Book Review: 'Encyclopedia Gothica' – Liisa Ladouceur – Terrorizer|date=2012-01-03|work=Terrorizer|access-date=2018-03-07|language=en-GB}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.macleans.ca/general/review-encyclopedia-gothica/|title=REVIEW: Encyclopedia Gothica – Macleans.ca|date=2011-11-02|work=Macleans.ca|access-date=2018-03-07|language=en-US}}</ref> This non-fiction book describes over 600 words and phrases relevant to Goth subculture.
Other murders which are attributed to people suspected of being part of the goth culture include the ] killing,<ref>CNN.com. 22 October 2005. . Retrieved on March 13, 2007.</ref> and the ],<ref>Reynolds, Richard, , ''The Sydney Morning Herald'', April 28, 2006.</ref><ref>Johnsrude, Larry, , ''Edmonton Journal'', April 26, 2006.</ref> although neither of these cases raised the same amount of media attention as the school shootings.


Brian Craddock's 2017 novel Eucalyptus Goth<ref>Goodreads </ref> charts a year in the life of a household of 20-somethings in ], Australia. The central characters are deeply entrenched in the local gothic subculture, with the book exploring themes relevant to the characters, notably unemployment, mental health, politics, and relationships.<ref>Renae Holyoak {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210127041636/https://www.outback-revue.com/eucalyptus-goth-book-launch/ |date=27 January 2021 }} Outback Revue</ref>
===Violence against goths===


In 2023, several books about the music genre and the subculture, were released. ]'s ''The Art of Darkness: The History of Goth'' was hailed in '']'' as a "new magestrial survey",<ref>{{citation |title=John Robb ''The Art of Darkness: The History of Goth''|id={{ASIN|1526173204|country=uk}} }}</ref> and ]'s ''Season of the Witch: The Book of Goth'' was praised in '']'' as a "superb history of the dark and all its risings".<ref>{{citation |title=Cathi Unsworth ''Season of the Witch: The Book of Goth''|id={{ASIN|1788706242|country=uk}} }}</ref>
In part because of public misunderstanding and ignorance surrounding gothic aesthetics, goths sometimes suffer ], ], and ]. As is the case with members of various other controversial subcultures and ]s, outsiders sometimes marginalize goths, either by intention or by accident.<ref name="NTTimesgoldberg">Carey Goldberg . '']'', May 1, 1999.</ref> Goths, like any other alternative sub-culture sometimes suffer ], ], and, in many cases, physical violence for their involvement with the subculture.<ref name = "czfeyy"/>


===Graphic art===
In 2006, a ] sailor, James Eric Benham, and his brother attacked four goths in ] ]. One goth, Jim Howard, had to be rushed to the hospital. The perpetrators of this attack were found guilty in August 2007 on four related accounts, two of which were felonies, though Benham only spent 37 days in jail. During the trial, it was made clear that the goths were assaulted due to their subculture affiliation. This can be otherwise known as a "hate crime" though the San Diego courts did not recognize this attack as such at the time.<ref> Gothic Angst Webzine. 8 Sep 2007</ref><ref> Gothic Angst Webzine. 1 May 2007</ref><ref> Jim Howard sept 1, 2007</ref>
{{further|New Gothic}}
Visual contemporary graphic artists with this aesthetic include ], ], and ] as well as illustrators ], ], ], and ]. The artwork of Polish surrealist painter ] is often described as gothic.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://culture.pl/en/article/the-cursed-paintings-of-zdzislaw-beksinski|title=The Cursed Paintings of Zdzisław Beksiński|work=Culture.pl|access-date=2018-10-18|language=en}}</ref> British artist ] published a book on gothic art in 2007.{{sfn|Sudworth|2007}}


===Events===
On 11 August 2007, a couple walking through Stubbylee Park in Bacup, Lancashire, England were attacked by a group of teenagers because they were goths. ] subsequently died from her injuries.<ref> BBC News-UK</ref><ref>Bonnie Malkin and agencies Telegraph.co.uk News</ref> On 29 April 2008, two teens Ryan Herbert and Brendan Harris were convicted for the murder of Lancaster and given life sentences, three others were given lesser sentences for the assault on her boyfriend Robert Maltby. In delivering the sentence Judge Anthony Russell stated "This was a hate crime against these completely harmless people targeted because their appearance was different to yours." He went on to defend the goth community, calling goths "perfectly peaceful, law-abiding people who pose no threat to anybody."<ref></ref><ref></ref><ref></ref> Judge Russell add that he "recognised it as a hate crime without Parliament having to tell him to do so, and had included that view in his sentencing."<ref></ref> Despite this ruling, a bill to add discrimination based on subculture affiliation to the definition of hate crime in British law was not presented to parliament.<ref></ref>
]]]
There are large annual goth-themed festivals in ], including ] in ] and ] in ], both annually attracting tens of thousands of people. ] is the biggest goth festival in Poland.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://castleparty.com/|title=Castle Party Festival|website=castleparty.com}}</ref>


===Interior design===
In 2008, Paul Gibbs, a Briton from ], ] was attacked by three men. He and his group of about 20 young goths were on a camping trip in the vicinity of Rothwell when two 18-year-olds (Quinn Colley, Ryan Woodhead) and one 22-year-old (Andrew Hall) raided, stabbed four of the men and robbed two women. Quinn Colley had previously appeared in a homemade clip rapping on his love of violence.<ref></ref> Gibbs was offered a motorbike ride by the attackers who at first insidiously befriended the group. On their way, they knocked Gibbs from the bike, rendered him unconscious with a helmet, and sliced off his ear. Afterwards, the attackers returned to the camp.
In the 1980s, goths decorated their walls and ceilings with black fabrics and accessories like rosaries, crosses and plastic roses. Black furniture and cemetery-related objects such as candlesticks, death lanterns and skulls were also part of their interior design. In the 1990s, the interior design approach of the 1980s was replaced by a less macabre style.


==Sociology==
Colley and Woodhead were sentenced to at least 2.5 years of prison while Hall at least 4.5 years. Gibbs' ear was found 17 hours later, thus doctors could not immediately reattach it. Instead, they stitched it inside his abdomen with the hope that some of the ] will re-grow. The ear could be reconstructed by using ] removed from Gibbs' ].<ref></ref><ref></ref><ref></ref><ref></ref><ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1192285/Man-ear-hacked-stitched-inside-stomach--surgeons-work-reattach-it.html | location=London | work=Daily Mail | title=Man whose ear was hacked off has it stitched inside his stomach... while surgeons work out how to reattach it | date=June 11, 2009}}</ref>
===Gender and sexuality===
Since the late 1970s, the UK goth scene refused "traditional standards of sexual propriety" and accepted and celebrated "unusual, bizarre or deviant sexual practices".{{sfn|Siegel|2007|p=350}} In the 2000s, many members "claim overlapping memberships in the ], ], ], and ] communities".{{sfn|Wilkins|2004}}

Though sexual empowerment is not unique to women in the goth scene, it remains an important part of many goth women's experience: The scene's "celebration of active sexuality" enables goth women to "resist mainstream notions of passive femininity". They have an "active sexuality" approach which creates "gender egalitarianism" within the scene, as it "allows them to engage in sexual play with multiple partners while sidestepping most of the stigma and dangers that women who engage in such behavior" outside the scene frequently incur, while continuing to "see themselves as strong".{{sfn|Wilkins|2004|p=329}}

Men dress up in an androgynous way: "Men 'gender blend,' wearing makeup and skirts". In contrast, the "women are dressed in sexy feminine outfits" that are "highly sexualized" and which often combine "]s with short skirts and ]s". ] is common among the scene: "androgyny in Goth subcultural style often disguises or even functions to reinforce conventional gender roles". It was only "valorised" for male goths, who adopt a "feminine" appearance, including "make-up, skirts and feminine accessories" to "enhance masculinity" and facilitate traditional heterosexual courting roles.<ref name="Spooner">{{cite magazine|title=Goth Culture: Gender, Sexuality and Style|date=28 May 2009|first=Catherine|last=Spooner|magazine=]|url=http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/books/goth-culture-gender-sexuality-and-style/406767.article/|access-date=25 July 2014}}</ref>

===Identity===
{{Main|Mall goth}}

While goth is a music-based scene, the goth subculture is also characterized by particular ], outlooks, and a "way of seeing and of being seen". In more recent years, goths have been able to meet people with similar interests, learn from each other and take part in the scene through social media, manifesting in the same practices which take place in goth clubs.<ref name="Karampampas 989–1003">{{Cite journal|last=Karampampas|first=Panas|date=2020-09-13|title=Goth YouTubers and the informal mentoring of young goths: peer support and solidarity in the Greek goth scene|url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13676261.2019.1646892|journal=Journal of Youth Studies|language=en|volume=23|issue=8|pages=989–1003|doi=10.1080/13676261.2019.1646892|s2cid=200084598|issn=1367-6261}}</ref> This is not a new phenomenon since before the rise of social media online forums had the same function for goths.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Hodkinson|first=Paul|url=http://www.bloomsburycollections.com/book/goth-identity-style-and-subculture|title=Goth: Identity, Style and Subculture|date=2002|publisher=Berg Publishers|isbn=978-1-84788-874-7|doi=10.2752/9781847888747/goth0012}}</ref> Observers have raised the issue of to what degree individuals are truly members of the goth subculture. On one end of the spectrum is the "Uber goth", a person who is described as seeking a pallor so much that they apply "as much white foundation and white powder as possible".{{sfn|Goodlad|Bibby|2007|p=36}} On the other end of the spectrum exists what another writer terms "]s" – "goth wannabes, usually young kids going through a goth phase who do not hold to goth sensibilities but want to be part of the goth crowd".{{sfn|Kilpatrick|2004|p=24}} It has been said that a "]" is a teen who dresses in a goth style and spends time in malls with a ] store, but who does not know much about goth subculture or its music, thus making them a poseur.{{sfn|Ladouceur|2011}} In one case, even a well-known performer has been labelled with the pejorative term – a "number of goths, especially those who belonged to this subculture before the late-1980s, reject ] as a poseur who undermines the true meaning of goth".{{sfn|Siegel|2007|p=344}}

===Media and academic commentary===
The ] described academic research that indicated that goths are "refined and sensitive, keen on poetry and books, not big on drugs or anti-social behaviour".<ref name="news.bbc.co.uk">{{cite news |first=Denise |last=Winterman |title=Upwardly gothic |publisher= BBC News Magazine |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/4828230.stm}}</ref> Teens often stay in the subculture "into their adult life", and they are likely to become well-educated and enter professions such as medicine or law.<ref name="news.bbc.co.uk"/> The subculture carries on appealing to teenagers who are looking for meaning and for identity. The scene teaches teens that there are difficult aspects to life that you "have to make an attempt to understand" or explain.<ref>{{cite news|title=The devil in your family room|date=16 December 1998|first=Fiona|last=Morgan|work=]|url=http://www.salon.com/1998/12/15/15hot_2/|access-date=25 July 2014}}</ref>

'']'' reported that a "glue binding the scene together was ]"; however, in the scene, drug use was varied. Goth is one of the few subculture movements that is not associated with a single drug,<ref name="Simpson" /> in the way that the ] subculture is associated with ] and the ] is associated with ]. A 2006 study of young goths found that those with higher levels of goth identification had higher drug use.{{sfn|Young|Sweeting|West|2006}}

===Perception on nonviolence===
A study conducted by the ], involving 1,258 youth interviewed at ages 11, 13, 15 and 19, found goth subculture to be strongly nonviolent and tolerant, thus providing "valuable social and emotional support" to teens vulnerable to self harm and mental illness.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn8996-goth-subculture-may-protect-vulnerable-children.html |title=Goth subculture may protect vulnerable children |work=New Scientist |date=14 April 2006 |access-date=2009-04-25}}</ref>

====School shootings====
In the weeks following the 1999 ], media reports about the teen gunmen, ], portrayed them as part of a gothic cult. An increased suspicion of goth subculture subsequently manifested in the media.<ref>{{cite news |last=Goldberg |first=Carey |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1999/05/01/us/terror-littleton-shunned-for-those-who-dress-differently-increase-being-viewed.html |title=For Those Who Dress Differently, an Increase in Being Viewed as Abnormal |newspaper=] |date=1 May 1999 |access-date=15 October 2014}}</ref> This led to a ] over teen involvement in goth subculture and a number of other activities, such as violent video games.<ref name=" www.salon.comt">{{cite news|url=http://www.salon.com/tech/feature/1999/04/23/gamers/index.html |title=Doom, Quake and mass murder |access-date=24 August 2008 |author=Janelle Brown |date=23 April 1999 |work=Salon |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080919092143/https://www.salon.com/tech/feature/1999/04/23/gamers/index.html |archive-date=19 September 2008}}</ref> Harris and Klebold had initially been thought to be members of "The Trenchcoat Mafia", an informal club within Columbine High School. Later, such characterizations were considered incorrect.<ref name=Salon>{{cite news |last=Cullen |first=Dave |url=http://www.salon.com/1999/09/23/columbine_4/ |title=Inside the Columbine High investigation |work=] |date=23 September 1999 |access-date=15 October 2014}}</ref>

Media reported that the gunman in the 2006 ] in ], ], ], was interested in goth subculture.<ref name="side-line_Gill">14 September 2006. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130219040256/http://www.side-line.com/news_comments.php?id=17308_0_2_0_C |date=19 February 2013 }} Side-line.com. Retrieved on 13 March 2007.</ref> Gill's self-professed love of Goth culture was the topic of media interest, and it was widely reported that the word "Goth", in Gill's writings, was a reference to the alternative ] and goth subculture rather than a reference to ] music.<ref name="side-line_Gill"/> Gill, who committed ] after the attack, wrote in his online journal: "I'm so sick of hearing about jocks and preps making life hard for the goths and others who look different, or are different".<ref>{{cite news|title=Chronologie d'un folie (Kimveer's online Journal)|newspaper=]|date=2006-09-15|url=http://techno.lapresse.ca/nouvelles/internet/200609/15/01-13680-kimveer-gill-chronologie-dune-folie.php|access-date=2016-07-27|archive-date=11 October 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161011190138/http://techno.lapresse.ca/nouvelles/internet/200609/15/01-13680-kimveer-gill-chronologie-dune-folie.php|url-status=dead}}</ref> Gill described himself in his profile on Vampirefreaks.com as "Trench{{nbsp}} the ]" and he stated that "Metal and Goth kick ass".<ref name="cbc.ca"></ref> An image gallery on Gill's Vampirefreaks.com blog had photos of him pointing a gun at the camera or wearing a long black trench coat.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.canada.com/topics/news/features/dawsonshooting/story.html?id=689b60e6-7ded-447c-b9b9-3d6ff521107b&k=89135|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070312010255/http://www.canada.com/topics/news/features/dawsonshooting/story.html?id=689b60e6-7ded-447c-b9b9-3d6ff521107b&k=89135|url-status=dead|title=canada.com|archivedate=12 March 2007}}</ref>

] stated that Gill was "not a Goth. Never a Goth. The bands he listed as his chosen form of ear-bashing were relentlessly ] and standard ], ] and ], with some ] presence". Mercer stated that "Kimveer Gill listened to metal", "He had nothing whatsoever to do with Goth" and further commented "I realise that like many ] , Kimveer Gill may even have believed he somehow was a Goth, because they're only really noted for spectacularly missing the point".<ref>Mick Mercer {{dead link|date=March 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} mickmercer.livejournal.com</ref>

===Prejudice and violence directed at goths===
In part because of public misunderstanding surrounding gothic aesthetics, people in the goth subculture sometimes suffer ], ], and ]. As is the case with members of various other subcultures and ]s, outsiders sometimes marginalize goths, either by intention or by accident.<ref name="NTTimesgoldberg">{{cite news |author=Goldberg, Carey |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1999/05/01/us/terror-littleton-shunned-for-those-who-dress-differently-increase-being-viewed.html?src=pm |title=Terror in Littleton: The Shunned; For Those Who Dress Differently, an Increase in Being Viewed as Abnormal |work=The New York Times |date=1 May 1999 |access-date=2012-03-18}}</ref> Actress ] talked of being bullied as a goth at school and how difficult it was for her to deal with societal pressure: "Kids can be pretty judgmental about people who are different. But instead of breaking down and conforming, I stood firm. That is also probably why I was unhappy. My mother was mortified and kept telling me how horrible and ugly I looked. Strangers would walk by with a look of shock on their face, so I never felt pretty. I just always felt awkward".<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/celebritynews/9088143/Christina-Hendricks-I-was-bullied-at-school-for-being-a-goth.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220111/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/celebritynews/9088143/Christina-Hendricks-I-was-bullied-at-school-for-being-a-goth.html |archive-date=11 January 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live|title=Christina Hendricks: 'I was bullied at school for being a goth'|date=17 February 2012 }}{{cbignore}}</ref>

On 11 August 2007, while walking through Stubbylee Park in ], ], a young couple, ] and Robert Maltby, were attacked by a group of teenagers. Lancaster subsequently died from the severe ] she suffered in the attack.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/lancashire/6943848.stm |title=Goth couple badly hurt in attack |work=BBC News-UK |date=11 August 2007 |access-date=2012-03-18}}</ref> It later emerged that the attackers had attacked the couple because they were goths. On 29 April 2008, two of the attackers, Ryan Herbert and Brendan Harris, were convicted for the murder of Lancaster and given life sentences. Three others were given lesser sentences for the assault on her boyfriend Robert Maltby. In delivering the sentence, Judge Anthony Russell stated, "This was a hate crime against these completely harmless people targeted because their appearance was different to yours". He went on to defend the goth community, calling goths "perfectly peaceful, law-abiding people who pose no threat to anybody".<ref>{{cite web |author=Byrne, Paul |url=http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/uk-world-news/2008/04/29/life-jail-trms-for-teenage-thugs-who-killed-goth-girl-86908-20398652/ |title=Life jail trms for teenage thugs who killed goth girl |work=dailyrecord.co.uk |date=29 April 2008 |access-date=2012-03-18}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/two-teenagers-sentenced-to-life-over-murder-of-goth-817218.html |work=Independent.co.uk |title=Two teenagers sentenced to life over murder of Goth |author=Pilling, Kim |date=29 April 2008 |access-date=2012-03-18 |archive-date=12 November 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121112052101/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/two-teenagers-sentenced-to-life-over-murder-of-goth-817218.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> Judge Russell added that he "recognised it as a hate crime without Parliament having to tell him to do so and had included that view in his sentencing".<ref>{{cite web |author=Henfield, Sally |url=http://www.lancashiretelegraph.co.uk/display.var.2233349.0.sophies_family_and_friends_vow_to_carry_on_campaign.php |title=Sophie's family and friends vow to carry on campaign |work=lancashiretelegraph.co.uk |date=29 April 2008 |access-date=2012-03-18}}</ref> Despite this ruling, a bill to add discrimination based on subculture affiliation to the definition of hate crime in British law was not presented to parliament.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/s/1043926_call_for_hate_crimes_law_change |title=Call for hate crimes law change |author=Smyth, Catherine |work=manchestereveningnews.co.uk |date=4 April 2008 |access-date=2012-03-18}}</ref>

In 2013, police in Manchester announced they would be treating attacks on members of alternative subcultures, such as goths, the same as they do for attacks based on race, religion, and sexual orientation.<ref>{{cite news | url= http://www.3news.co.nz/Manchester-goths-get-police-protection/tabid/417/articleID/293078/Default.aspx | archive-url= https://archive.today/20150315190920/http://www.3news.co.nz/Manchester-goths-get-police-protection/tabid/417/articleID/293078/Default.aspx | url-status= dead | archive-date= 15 March 2015 | work= 3 News NZ | title= Manchester goths get police protection | date= 5 April 2013 }}</ref>

A more recent phenomenon is the emergence of goth YouTubers who very often address the prejudice and violence against goths. These personalities create videos as a response to problems that they personally face, which include challenges such as bullying, and dealing with negative descriptions of themselves. Viewers often engage closely with these YouTubers, asking them for advice on how to deal with related personal struggles and getting responses in the form of personal messages or videos. These interactions take the form of an informal mentoring which contributes to the building of solidarity within the goth scene.<ref name="Karampampas 989–1003"/>


===Self-harm study=== ===Self-harm study===
A study published on the '']'' concluded that "identification as belonging to the Goth subculture was the best predictor of ] and attempted suicide ", and that it was most possibly due to self-selection, with people committing self harm joining the goth subculture in order to get support from individuals with similar experiences.{{sfn|Young|Sweeting|West|2006}}


According to ''The Guardian'', some goth teens are more likely to harm themselves or attempt suicide. A medical journal study of 1,300 Scottish schoolchildren until their teen years found that the 53% of the 25 goth teens sampled had attempted to harm themselves and 47% had attempted suicide. The study found that the "correlation was stronger than any other predictor".<ref>Polly Curtis and John Carvel. "Teen goths more prone to suicide, study shows". ''The Guardian'', Friday 14 April 2006</ref><ref name="bbc harm">{{cite news | work = ] | title = Goths 'more likely to self-harm' | date = 13 April 2006 | url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4905898.stm |access-date=2012-03-18}}</ref>
A study published on the ] concluded that "identification as belonging to the Goth subculture was the best predictor of ] and attempted suicide ", and that it was most possibly due to a selection mechanism (persons that wanted to harm themselves later identified as goths, thus raising the percentage of those persons who identify as goths).<ref>http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/abstract/bmj.38790.495544.7Cv1</ref> The study was based on a sample of 15 teenagers who identified as goths, of which 8 had self-harmed by any method, 7 had self-harmed by cutting, scratching or scoring, and 7 had attempted suicide.<ref>{{cite journal | journal = ] | title = Prevalence of deliberate self harm and attempted suicide within contemporary Goth youth subculture: longitudinal cohort study | author = Robert Young, Helen Sweeting, Patrick West | issue = 7549| pages = 1058–1061 | date = 2006-05-06 | doi = 10.1136/bmj.38790.495544.7C | url = http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/abstract/332/7549/1058 | pmid = 16613936 | volume = 332 | pmc = 1458563 }}</ref><ref name="vince">{{cite news | work = ] | title = Goth subculture may protect vulnerable children | date = 2006-04-14 | author = Gaia Vince | url = http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn8996-goth-subculture-may-protect-vulnerable-children.html }}</ref><ref name="bbc harm">{{cite news | work = ] | title = Goths 'more likely to self-harm' | date = 2006-04-13 | url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4905898.stm }}</ref>


The authors held that most self-harm by teens was done before joining the subculture, and that joining the subculture would actually protect them and help them deal with distress in their lives.<ref name="vince" /><ref name="bbc harm" /> The authors insisted on the study being based on small numbers and on the need of replication to confirm the results.<ref name="vince" /><ref name="bbc harm" /> The study was criticized for using a small sample of goth teens and not taking into account other influences and differences between different types of goth.<ref>Sources: The authors held that most self-harm by teens was done before joining the subculture, and that joining the subculture would actually protect them and help them deal with distress in their lives, while cautioning that the study was based on a small sample size and needed replication to confirm the results.<ref name="bbc harm" /><ref name="vince">{{cite news | work = ] | title = Goth subculture may protect vulnerable children | date = 14 April 2006 | author = Gaia Vince | url = https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn8996-goth-subculture-may-protect-vulnerable-children.html |access-date=2012-03-18}}</ref> The study was criticized for using only a small sample of goth teens and not taking into account other influences and differences between types of goths.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Taubert |first1=Mark |last2=Kandasamy |first2=Jothy |year=2006 |title=Self Harm in Goth Youth Subculture: Conclusion Relates Only to Small Sample |journal=BMJ |type=letter to the editor |volume=332 |issue=7551 |page=1216 |doi=10.1136/bmj.332.7551.1216 |pmc=1463972 |pmid=16710018}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last=Phillipov |first=Michelle |year=2006 |title=Self Harm in Goth Youth Subculture: Study Merely Reinforces Popular Stereotypes |journal=BMJ |type=letter to the editor |volume=332 |issue=7551 |pages=1215–1216 |doi=10.1136/bmj.332.7551.1215-b |pmid=16710012 |pmc=1463947}}</ref>{{sfn|Young|Sweeting|West|2006}}
* Letter to the editor {{cite journal | journal = ] | date = 2006-05-20 | issue = 332(7551) | page = 1216 | doi = 10.1136/bmj.332.7551.1216 | pmc =1463972 | title=Letters. Self harm in Goth youth subculture: Conclusion relates only to small sample | author = Mark Taubert, senior house officer in palliative medicine Holme Tower Marie Curie Hospital, Jothy Kandasamy specialist registrar in neurosurgery Walton Centre for Neurology and Neurosurgery | volume = 1 | pmid=16710018}}
* Letter to the editor {{cite journal | journal = ] | date = 2006-05-20 | issue = 7551| pages = 1215–1216 | doi = 10.1136/bmj.332.7551.1215-b | title = Letter. Self harm in Goth youth subculture: Study merely reinforces popular stereotypes | url = http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/extract/332/7551/1215-b | pmid = 16710012 | last1 = Phillipov | first1 = M | volume = 332 | pmc = 1463947 }}
* Author's reply {{cite journal | journal = ] | date = 2006-06-03 | issue = 7553| page = 1335 | doi = 10.1136/bmj.332.7553.1335-a | title = Letter. Self harm in Goth youth subculture: authors' reply | url = http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/extract/332/7553/1335-a | pmid = 16740576 | last1 = Young | first1 = R | last2 = Sweeting | first2 = H | last3 = West | first3 = P | volume = 332 | pmc = 1473089 }}
</ref>


==See also== ==See also==
*] * ]
*] * ]
*] * ]
*]
*]


==References== ==References==
===Citations===
;Books
{{reflist|colwidth=30em}}


===Bibliography===
* Baddeley, Gavin: ''Goth Chic: A Connoisseur's Guide to Dark Culture'' (Plexus, US, August 2002, ISBN 0-85965-308-0)
{{refbegin|35em|indent=yes}}
* Davenport-Hines, Richard: ''Gothic: Four Hundred Years of Excess, Horror, Evil and Ruin''. 1999: North Port Press. ISBN 0-86547-590-3 (trade paperback)—A voluminous, if somewhat patchy, chronological/aesthetic history of Gothic covering the spectrum from Gothic architecture to The Cure.
* {{cite book
*Embracing the Darkness; Understanding Dark Subcultures by Corvis Nocturnum (Dark Moon Press 2005. ISBN 978-0-9766984-0-1) Features interviews with Michelle Belanger, "The Vampire" Don Henrie of Sci-Fi Channel's Mad Mad House, current Church of Satan High Priest Magus Peter H. Gilmore, Playboy and Fetish model Bianca Beauchamp, gothic clothing designer Kambriel, Geoff Kayson (founder of the occult jewelry retailer Alchemy Gothic), members of the dark metal band URN, and others.
|last1=Goodlad
* Digitalis, Raven: ''Goth Craft: The Magickal Side of Dark Culture'' (2007: Llewellyn Worldwide)—includes a lengthy explanation of Gothic history, music, fashion, and proposes a link between mystic/magical spirituality and dark subcultures.
|first1=Lauren M. E.
* Fuentes Rodríguez, César: ''Mundo Gótico''. (Quarentena Ediciones, 2007, ISBN 84-933891-6-1)—In Spanish. Covering Literature, Music, Cinema, BDSM, Fashion and Subculture topics
|last2=Bibby
* Furek, Maxim W.: The Death Proclamation of Generation X: A Self-Fulfilling Prophesy of Goth, Grunge and Heroin". (i-Universe, US 2008; ISBN 978-0-595-46319-0)
|first2=Michael
* Hodkinson, Paul: ''Goth: Identity, Style and Subculture'' (Dress, Body, Culture Series) 2002: Berg. ISBN 1-85973-600-9 (hardcover); ISBN 1-85973-605-X (softcover)
|year=2007
* Kilpatrick, Nancy: ''The Goth Bible: A Compendium for the Darkly Inclined''. 2004: St. Martin's Griffin. ISBN 0-312-30696-2
|chapter=Introduction
* Steele, Valerie and Jennifer Park: ''Gothic: Dark Glamour''. 2008: ] and the Fashion Institute of Technology New York. ISBN 978-0-300-13694-4 (hardcover)
|editor1-last=Goodlad
* ]: ''What is Goth?'' (WeiserBooks, US, 2004; ISBN 1-57863-322-2)—a view of the goth subculture
|editor1-first=Lauren M. E.
* Andrew C. Zinn: ''The Truth Behind The Eyes'' (IUniverse, US, 2005; ISBN 0-595-37103-5)—Dark Poetry
|editor2-last=Bibby
* ]: ''21st Century Goth'' (Reynolds & Hearn, 2002; ISBN 1-903111-28-5)-an exploration of the modern state of the goth subculture worldwide.
|editor2-first=Michael
*]: ''Hex Files: The Goth Bible''. (9 Overlook Press, 1 Amer ed edition, 1997 ISBN 0-87951-783-2)-an international survey of the goth scene.
|title=Goth: Undead Subculture
*]: ''Cottonmouth Kisses''. (Manic D Press, 2000 ISBN 978-0-916397-65-4 )- A first-person account of an individual's life within the Goth Subculture (book has ] listing under "Goth Subculture").
|location=Durham, North Carolina
*Venters, Jillian: ''Gothic Charm School: An Essential Guide for Goths and Those Who Love Them''.(Harper Paperbacks, 2009 ISBN 0-06-166916-4 )- An etiquette guide to "gently persuade others in her chosen subculture that being a polite Goth is much, much more subversive than just wearing T-shirts with "edgy" sayings on them."
|publisher=Duke University Press

|isbn=978-0-8223-8970-5
;Articles
|pages=1–37
*La Ferla, Ruth: "Embrace the Darkness".<ref></ref> '']'', October 30, 2005.
}}

* {{cite book
;Notes
|last=Grunenberg
{{Reflist|2}}
|first=Christoph
|year=1997
|title=Gothic: Transmutations of Horror in Late-Twentieth-Century Art
|chapter=Unsolved Mysteries: Gothic Tales from ''Frankenstein'' to the Hair Eating Doll
|publisher=Mit Press
|location=Boston
|isbn=978-0-262-57128-9
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Hannaham
|first=James
|year=1997
|title=Gothic: Transmutations of Horror in Late-Twentieth-Century Art
|chapter=Bela Lugosi's Dead and I Don't Feel So Good Either: Goth and the Glorification of Suffering in Rock Music
|publisher=Mit Press
|location=Boston
|isbn=978-0-262-57128-9
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Jones
|first=Timothy
|year=2015
|title=The Gothic and the Gothic Carnivalesque in American Culture
|location=Cardiff, Wales
|publisher=University of Wales Press
|isbn=978-1-78316-230-7
|jstor=j.ctt17w8hdq
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Kilpatrick
|first=Nancy
|author-link=Nancy Kilpatrick
|year=2004
|title=Goth Bible: A Compendium for the Darkly Inclined
|location=New York
|publisher=St. Martin's Griffin
|isbn=978-0-312-30696-0
|url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780312306960
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Koszarski
|first=Richard
|year=1994
|title=An Evening's Entertainment: The Age of the Silent Feature Picture, 1915–1928
|location=Berkeley, California
|publisher=University of California Press
|isbn=978-0-520-08535-0
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Ladouceur
|first=Liisa
|year=2011
|title=Encyclopedia Gothica
|others=Illustrated by Pullin, Gary
|location=Toronto
|publisher=ECW Press
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Mellins
|first=Maria
|year=2013
|title=Vampire Culture
|location=London
|publisher=Bloomsbury Academic
|isbn=978-1-4725-0385-5
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Reynolds
|first=Simon
|author-link=Simon Reynolds
|year=2005
|title=Rip It Up and Start Again: Postpunk 1978–1984
|location=London
|publisher=Faber and Faber
|isbn=978-0-571-21569-0
|url=https://archive.org/details/ripitupstartagai00reyn
}}
* {{cite journal |last=Richter |first=David H. |year=1987 |title=Gothic Fantasia: The Monsters and The Myths: A Review-Article |journal=The Eighteenth Century |volume=28 |issue=2 |pages=149–170 |issn=0193-5380 |jstor=41467717}}
* ] (2023). ''The Art of Darkness : The History Of Goth''. Louder Than War Books. {{ISBN|978-1-914424-86-1}}
* {{cite book
|last=Siegel
|first=Carol
|year=2007
|chapter=That Obscure Object of Desire Revisited: Poppy Z. Brite and the Goth Hero as Masochist
|editor1-last=Goodlad
|editor1-first=Lauren M. E.
|editor2-last=Bibby
|editor2-first=Michael
|title=Goth: Undead Subculture
|location=Durham, North Carolina
|publisher=Duke University Press
|isbn=978-0-8223-8970-5
|pages=335–356
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Spuybroek
|first=Lars
|author-link=Lars Spuybroek
|year=2011
|title=The Sympathy of Things: Ruskin and the Ecology of Design
|location=Rotterdam, Netherlands
|publisher=V2_Publishing
|isbn=978-90-5662-827-7
}}
* {{cite book
|last1=Steele
|first1=Valerie
|author-link1=Valerie Steele
|last2=Park
|first2=Jennifer
|date=21 October 2008
|title=Gothic: Dark Glamour
|publisher=Yale University Press
|language=en
|isbn=978-0300136944
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Sudworth
|first=Anne
|author-link=Anne Sudworth
|year=2007
|title=Gothic Fantasies: The Paintings of Anne Sudworth
|location=London
|publisher=AAPPL Artists' and Photographers' Press
|isbn=978-1-904332-56-5
}}
* ] (2023). ''Season of the Witch: The Book of Goth''. Nine Eight Books. {{ISBN|978-1788706247}}
* {{cite journal |last=Wilkins |first=Amy C. |year=2004 |title='So Full of Myself as a Chick': Goth Women, Sexual Independence, and Gender Egalitarianism |journal=Gender & Society |volume=8 |issue=3 |pages=328–349 |issn=0891-2432 |jstor=4149405 |doi=10.1177/0891243204264421 |url=http://www.brown.uk.com/poly/wilkins.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160716163212/http://www.brown.uk.com/poly/wilkins.pdf |archive-date=2016-07-16 |url-status=live |citeseerx=10.1.1.413.9162 |s2cid=11244993}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Young |first1=Robert |last2=Sweeting |first2=Helen |last3=West |first3=Patrick |year=2006 |title=Prevalence of Deliberate Self Harm and Attempted Suicide within Contemporary Goth Youth Subculture: Longitudinal Cohort Study |journal=BMJ |volume=332 |issue=7549 |pages=1058–1061 |issn=1756-1833 |doi=10.1136/bmj.38790.495544.7C |pmid=16613936 |doi-access=free |pmc=1458563}}
{{refend}}


==Further reading== ==Further reading==
{{refbegin|35em|indent=yes}}
* {{Cite book | title = Goth: Undead Subculture | author = Goodlad, Lauren M. E. |coauthor = Michael Bibby (eds.) | publisher = ] | location = Durham, N.C. | year = 2007 | isbn = 0822339218 | url = http://books.google.com/?id=OdpOdIATKOcC }}
* {{cite book
* {{Cite book | title = The Subcultures Reader | author = Hodkinson, Paul | editor = Ken Gelder | edition = 2nd | publisher = ] | location = London |chapter = Communicating Goth: On-line Media | year = 2005 | isbn = 0415344166 | pages = 567–574 | url = http://books.google.com/?id=USl1G-903EwC&pg=PA564 }} Goth communication on the internet.
|last=Baddeley

|first=Gavin
==External links==
|author-link=Gavin Baddeley
{{Commons category|Gothic subculture}}
|year=2002
* from the '']'' on benefits of the Goth subculture.
|title=Goth Chic: A Connoisseur's Guide to Dark Culture
|publisher=Plexus
|isbn=978-0-85965-308-4
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Brill
|first=Dunja
|year=2008
|title=Goth Culture: Gender, Sexuality and Style
|location=Oxford
|publisher=Berg Publishers
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Catalyst
|first=Clint
|author-link=Clint Catalyst
|year=2000
|title=Cottonmouth Kisses
|location=San Francisco, California
|publisher=Manic D Press
|isbn=978-0-916397-65-4
}}<br />A first-person account of an individual's life within the Goth subculture.
* {{cite book
|last=Davenport-Hines
|first=Richard
|author-link=Richard Davenport-Hines
|year=1999
|title=Gothic: Four Hundred Years of Excess, Horror, Evil and Ruin
|url=https://archive.org/details/gothicfourhundre00dave
|url-access=registration
|location=New York
|publisher=North Port Press
|isbn=978-0-86547-590-8
}}<br />A chronological/aesthetic history of Goth covering the spectrum from Gothic architecture to the Cure.
* {{cite book
|last=Digitalis
|first=Raven
|year=2007
|title=Goth Craft: The Magickal Side of Dark Culture
|location=Woodbury, Minnesota
|publisher=Llewellyn Publications
|isbn=978-0-7387-1104-1
|url=https://archive.org/details/gothcraftmagicka00digi
}}<br />Includes a lengthy explanation of Gothic history, music, fashion, and proposes a link between mystic/magical spirituality and dark subcultures.
* {{cite book
|last=Fuentes Rodríguez
|first=César
|year=2007
|title=Mundo Gótico
|language=es
|publisher=Quarentena Ediciones
|isbn=978-84-933891-6-1
}}<br />Covering literature, music, cinema, BDSM, fashion, and subculture topics.
* {{cite book
|last=Hodkinson
|first=Paul
|year=2002
|title=Goth: Identity, Style and Subculture
|location=Oxford
|publisher=Berg Publishers
|isbn=978-1-85973-600-5
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Hodkinson
|first=Paul
|author-mask={{long dash}}
|year=2005
|chapter=Communicating Goth: On-line Media
|editor-last=Gelder
|editor-first=Ken
|title=The Subcultures Reader
|edition=2nd
|location=London
|publisher=Routledge
|pages=567–574
|isbn=978-0-415-34416-6
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Mercer
|first=Mick
|author-link=Mick Mercer
|year=1996
|title=Hex Files: The Goth Bible
|location=London
|publisher=Batsford
|isbn=978-0-7134-8033-7
}}<br />An international survey of the Goth scene.
* {{cite book
|last=Mercer
|first=Mick
|author-link=Mick Mercer
|author-mask={{long dash}}
|year=2002
|title=21st Century Goth
|location=London
|publisher=Reynolds & Hearn
|isbn=978-1-903111-28-4
}}<br />An exploration of the modern state of the Goth subculture worldwide.
* {{cite book
|last=Scharf
|first=Natasha
|author-link=Natasha Scharf
|year=2011
|title=Worldwide Gothic: A Chronicle of a Tribe
|location=Church Stretton, England
|publisher=Independent Music Press
|isbn=978-1-906191-19-1
}}<br />A global view of the goth scene from its birth in the late 1970s to the present day.
* {{cite book
|last=Vas
|first=Abdul
|author-link=Abdul Vas
|year=2012
|title=For Those About to Power
|location=Madrid
|publisher=T.F. Editores
|isbn=978-84-15253-52-5
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Venters
|first=Jillian
|year=2009
|title=Gothic Charm School: An Essential Guide for Goths and Those Who Love Them
|others=Illustrated by Venters, Pete
|location=New York
|publisher=HarperCollins
|isbn=978-0-06-166916-3
}}<br />An etiquette guide to "gently persuade others in her chosen subculture that being a polite Goth is much, much more subversive than just wearing T-shirts with "edgy" sayings on them".
* {{cite book
|author=Voltaire
|author-link=Aurelio Voltaire
|year=2004
|title=What is Goth?
|location=Boston
|publisher=Weiser Books
|isbn=978-1-57863-322-7
}}<br />An illustrated view of the goth subculture.
{{refend}}


{{Goth subculture}}
{{Gothic}} {{Gothic}}
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Latest revision as of 01:58, 31 December 2024

Contemporary subculture This article is about the subculture. For the Germanic tribes, see Goths. For other uses, see Goth.

A woman dressed in gothic style in June 2008

Goth is a subculture that began in the United Kingdom during the early 1980s. It was developed by fans of gothic rock, an offshoot of the post-punk music genre. Post-punk artists who anticipated the gothic rock genre and helped develop and shape the subculture include Siouxsie and the Banshees, Bauhaus, the Cure and Joy Division.

The goth subculture has survived much longer than others of the same era, and has continued to diversify and spread throughout the world. Its imagery and cultural proclivities indicate influences from 19th-century Gothic fiction and from horror films. The scene is centered on music festivals, nightclubs, and organized meetings, especially in Western Europe. The subculture has associated tastes in music, aesthetics and fashion.

The music preferred by goths includes a number of styles such as gothic rock, death rock, cold wave, dark wave and ethereal wave. The Gothic fashion style draws influences from punk, new wave, New Romantic fashion and the dressing styles of earlier periods such as the Victorian, Edwardian and Belle Époque eras. The style most often includes dark (usually solid black) attire, dark makeup and black hair.

Music

Main article: Gothic rock

Origins and development

Siouxsie Sioux of Siouxsie and the Banshees in 1980

The term gothic rock was coined by music critic John Stickney in 1967 to describe a meeting he had with Jim Morrison in a dimly lit wine-cellar, which he called "the perfect room to honor the Gothic rock of the Doors". That same year, the Velvet Underground song "All Tomorrow's Parties" created a kind of "mesmerizing gothic-rock masterpiece" according to music historian Kurt Loder. In the late 1970s, the gothic adjective was used to describe the atmosphere of post-punk bands such as Siouxsie and the Banshees, Magazine, and Joy Division. In a live review about a Siouxsie and the Banshees' concert in July 1978, critic Nick Kent wrote, concerning their music, "arallels and comparisons can now be drawn with gothic rock architects like the Doors and, certainly, early Velvet Underground". In March 1979, in his review of Magazine's second album Secondhand Daylight, Kent noted there was "a new austere sense of authority" in the music, with a "dank neo-Gothic sound". Later that year, the term was also used by Joy Division's manager, Tony Wilson on 15 September in an interview for the BBC TV programme's Something Else. Wilson described Joy Division as "gothic" compared to the pop mainstream, right before a live performance of the band. The term was later applied to "newer bands such as Bauhaus who had arrived in the wake of Joy Division and Siouxsie and the Banshees". Bauhaus's first single issued in 1979, "Bela Lugosi's Dead", is generally credited as the starting point of the gothic rock genre.

In 1979, Sounds described Joy Division as "Gothic" and "theatrical". In February 1980, Melody Maker qualified the same band as "masters of this Gothic gloom". Critic Jon Savage would later say that their singer Ian Curtis wrote "the definitive Northern Gothic statement". However, it was not until the early 1980s that gothic rock became a coherent music subgenre within post-punk, and followers of these bands started to come together as a distinctly recognizable movement. They may have taken the "goth" mantle from a 1981 article published in UK rock weekly Sounds: "The face of Punk Gothique", written by Steve Keaton. In a text about the audience of UK Decay, Keaton asked: "Could this be the coming of Punk Gothique? With Bauhaus flying in on similar wings could it be the next big thing?" The F Club night in Leeds in Northern England, which had opened in 1977 firstly as a punk club, became instrumental to the development of the goth subculture in the 1980s. In July 1982, the opening of the Batcave in London's Soho provided a prominent meeting point for the emerging scene, which would be briefly labelled "positive punk" by the NME in a special issue with a front cover in early 1983. The term Batcaver was then used to describe old-school goths.

Bauhaus—live in concert, 3 February 2006

Outside the British scene, deathrock developed in California during the late 1970s and early 1980s as a distinct branch of American punk rock, with acts such as Christian Death, Kommunity FK and 45 Grave at the forefront.

Gothic genre

The bands that defined and embraced the gothic rock genre included Bauhaus, early Adam and the Ants, the Cure, the Birthday Party, Southern Death Cult, Specimen, Sex Gang Children, UK Decay, Virgin Prunes, Killing Joke, and the Damned. Near the peak of this first generation of the gothic scene in 1983, The Face's Paul Rambali recalled "several strong Gothic characteristics" in the music of Joy Division. In 1984, Joy Division's bassist Peter Hook named Play Dead as one of their heirs: "If you listen to a band like Play Dead, who I really like, Joy Division played similar music to Play Dead."

Lead singer and guitarist Robert Smith of the Cure

By the mid-1980s, bands began proliferating and became increasingly popular, including the Sisters of Mercy, the Mission, Alien Sex Fiend, the March Violets, Xmal Deutschland, the Membranes, and Fields of the Nephilim. Record labels like Factory, 4AD and Beggars Banquet released much of this music in Europe, and through a vibrant import music market in the US, the subculture grew, especially in New York and Los Angeles, California, where many nightclubs featured "gothic/industrial" nights and bands like Black Tape for a Blue Girl, Theatre of Ice, Human Drama and The Wake became key figures for the genre to expand on an nationwide level. The popularity of 4AD bands resulted in the creation of similar US labels, such as Wax Trax! Records and Projekt.

The 1990s saw further growth for some 1980s bands and the emergence of many new acts, as well as new goth-centric US record labels such as Cleopatra Records, among others. According to Dave Simpson of The Guardian, "n the 90s, goths all but disappeared as dance music became the dominant youth cult". As a result, the goth movement went underground and fractured into cyber goth, shock rock, industrial metal, gothic metal, and Medieval folk metal. Marilyn Manson was seen as a "goth-shock icon" by Spin.

Art, historical and cultural influences

The Goth subculture of the 1980s drew inspiration from a variety of sources. Some of them were modern or contemporary, others were centuries-old or ancient. Michael Bibby and Lauren M. E. Goodlad liken the subculture to a bricolage. Among the music-subcultures that influenced it were punk, new wave, and glam. But it also drew inspiration from B-movies, Gothic literature, horror films, vampire cults and traditional mythology. Among the mythologies that proved influential in Goth were Celtic mythology, Christian mythology, and various traditions of Paganism.

The figures that the movement counted among its historic canon of ancestors were equally diverse. They included the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900), Comte de Lautréamont (1846–1870), Salvador Dalí (1904–1989) and Jean-Paul Sartre (1905–1980). Writers that have had a significant influence on the movement also represent a diverse canon. They include Ann Radcliffe (1764–1823), John William Polidori (1795–1821), Edgar Allan Poe (1809–1849), Sheridan Le Fanu (1814–1873), Bram Stoker (1847–1912), Oscar Wilde (1854–1900), H. P. Lovecraft (1890–1937), Anne Rice (1941–2021), William Gibson (1948–present), Ian McEwan (1948–present), Storm Constantine (1956–2021), and Poppy Z. Brite (1967–present).

18th and 19th centuries

Mary Shelley's Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus (1818) has come to define Gothic fiction in the Romantic period. Frontispiece to 1831 edition shown.

Gothic literature is a genre of fiction that combines romance and dark elements to produce mystery, suspense, terror, horror and the supernatural. According to David H. Richter, settings were framed to take place at "...ruinous castles, gloomy churchyards, claustrophobic monasteries, and lonely mountain roads". Typical characters consisted of the cruel parent, sinister priest, courageous victor, and the helpless heroine, along with supernatural figures such as demons, vampires, ghosts, and monsters. Often, the plot focused on characters ill-fated, internally conflicted, and innocently victimized by harassing malicious figures. In addition to the dismal plot focuses, the literary tradition of the gothic was to also focus on individual characters that were gradually going insane.

English author Horace Walpole, with his 1764 novel The Castle of Otranto is one of the first writers who explored this genre. The American Revolutionary War-era "American Gothic" story of the Headless Horseman, immortalized in "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" (published in 1820) by Washington Irving, marked the arrival in the New World of dark, romantic storytelling. The tale was composed by Irving while he was living in England, and was based on popular tales told by colonial Dutch settlers of the Hudson Valley, New York. The story would be adapted to film in 1922, in 1949 as the animated The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad, and again in 1999.

Throughout the evolution of the goth subculture, classic Romantic, Gothic and horror literature has played a significant role. E. T. A. Hoffmann (1776–1822), Edgar Allan Poe (1809–1849), Charles Baudelaire (1821–1867), H. P. Lovecraft (1890–1937), and other tragic and Romantic writers have become as emblematic of the subculture as the use of dark eyeliner or dressing in black. Baudelaire, in fact, in his preface to Les Fleurs du mal (Flowers of Evil) penned lines that could serve as a sort of goth malediction:

C'est l'Ennui! —l'œil chargé d'un pleur involontaire,
Il rêve d'échafauds en fumant son houka.
Tu le connais, lecteur, ce monstre délicat,
—Hypocrite lecteur,—mon semblable,—mon frère!

It is Boredom! — an eye brimming with an involuntary tear,
He dreams of the gallows while smoking his water-pipe.
You know him, reader, this delicate monster,
—Hypocrite reader,—my twin,—my brother!

Visual art influences

Ophelia (1851) by John Everett Millais

The gothic subculture has influenced different artists—not only musicians—but also painters and photographers. In particular their work is based on mystic, morbid and romantic motifs. In photography and painting the spectrum varies from erotic artwork to romantic images of vampires or ghosts. There is a marked preference for dark colours and sentiments, similar to Gothic fiction. At the end of the 19th century, painters like John Everett Millais and John Ruskin invented a new kind of Gothic.

20th century influences

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Some people credit Jalacy "Screamin' Jay" Hawkins, perhaps best known for his 1956 song "I Put A Spell on You", as a foundation of modern goth style and music. Some people credit the band Bauhaus' first single "Bela Lugosi's Dead", released in August 1979, with the start of goth subculture.

In the early 90s, Jack Off Jill, fronted by vocalist Jessicka, pioneered the 'Riot Goth' sound, combining elements of the goth and riot grrrl genres. Through their lyrics, the band tackled issues such as misogyny and racism, giving them significant underground appeal.

21st century influences

This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (October 2017)

The British sitcom The IT Crowd featured a recurring goth character named Richmond Avenal, played by Noel Fielding. Fielding said in an interview that he himself had been a goth at age fifteen and that he had a series of goth girlfriends. This was the first time he dabbled in makeup. Fielding said that he loved his girlfriends dressing him up.

The game Visigoths vs. Mall Goths (2020) by Lucian Kahn is about "two versions of Goths – the ancient Roman peoples and the black-clad teenagers" and is set in LA in the 1990s.

Characteristics of the scene

Icons

Goth icons include several bandleaders: Siouxsie Sioux, of Siouxsie and the Banshees; Robert Smith, of the Cure; Peter Murphy, of Bauhaus; Dave Vanian, of The Damned; Rozz Williams, of Christian Death; Olli Wisdom, leader of the band Specimen and keyboardist Jonathan Melton aka Jonny Slut, who evolved the Batcave style. Nick Cave was dubbed as "the grand lord of gothic lushness".

Fashion

Main article: Gothic fashion
A woman dressed in gothic style in the 1980s

Influences

One female role model is Theda Bara, the 1910s femme fatale known for her dark eyeshadow. In 1977, Karl Lagerfeld hosted the Soirée Moratoire Noir party, specifying "tenue tragique noire absolument obligatoire" (black tragic dress absolutely required). The event included elements associated with leatherman style.

Siouxsie Sioux was particularly influential on the dress style of the gothic rock scene; Paul Morley of NME described Siouxsie and the Banshees' 1980 gig at Futurama: " modeling her newest outfit, the one that will influence how all the girls dress over the next few months. About half the girls at Leeds had used Sioux as a basis for their appearance, hair to ankle". Robert Smith, Musidora, Bela Lugosi, Bettie Page, Vampira, Morticia Addams, Nico, Rozz Williams, David Bowie and Lux Interior are also style icons.

The 1980s established designers such as Drew Bernstein of Lip Service, and the 1990s saw a surge of US-based gothic fashion designers, many of whom continue to evolve the style to the present day. Style magazines such as Gothic Beauty have given repeat features to a select few gothic fashion designers who began their labels in the 1990s, such as Kambriel, Rose Mortem, and Tyler Ondine of Heavy Red.

American model Gabbriette who has been known for her goth aesthetic, has been at the forefront of what has been dubbed the "Succubus Chic" trend of 2023.

Styling

Gothic fashion is marked by conspicuously dark, antiquated, and homogeneous features. It is stereotyped as eerie, mysterious, complex, and exotic. A dark, sometimes morbid fashion and style of dress, typical gothic fashion includes colored black hair and black period-styled clothing. Both male and female goths can wear dark eyeliner and dark fingernail polish, most especially black. Styles are often borrowed from punk fashion and—more currently—from the Victorian and Elizabethan periods. It also frequently expresses pagan, occult or other religious imagery. Gothic fashion and styling may also feature silver jewelry and piercings.

A gothic clothing store in 2010

Ted Polhemus described goth fashion as a "profusion of black velvets, lace, fishnets and leather tinged with scarlet or purple, accessorized with tightly laced corsets, gloves, precarious stilettos and silver jewelry depicting religious or occult themes". Of the male "goth look", goth historian Pete Scathe draws a distinction between the Sid Vicious archetype of black spiky hair and black leather jacket in contrast to the gender ambiguous individuals wearing makeup. The first is the early goth gig-going look, which was essentially punk, whereas the second evolved into the Batcave nightclub look. Early goth gigs were often very hectic affairs, and the audience dressed accordingly.

In contrast to the LARP-based Victorian and Elizabethan pomposity of the 2000s, the more Romantic side of 1980s trad-goth—mainly represented by women—was characterized by new wave/post-punk-oriented hairstyles (both long and short, partly shaved and teased) and street-compliant clothing, including black frill blouses, midi dresses or tea-length skirts, and floral lace tights, Dr. Martens, spike heels (pumps), and pointed-toe buckle boots (winklepickers), sometimes supplemented with accessories such as bracelets, chokers and bib necklaces. This style, retroactively referred to as Ethergoth, took its inspiration from Siouxsie Sioux and mid-1980s musicians from the 4AD roster like Elizabeth Fraser and Lisa Gerrard.

The New York Times noted: "The costumes and ornaments are a glamorous cover for the genre's somber themes. In the world of Goth, nature itself lurks as a malign protagonist, causing flesh to rot, rivers to flood, monuments to crumble and women to turn into slatterns, their hair streaming and lipstick askew".

Cintra Wilson declares that the origins of the dark romantic style are found in the "Victorian cult of mourning". Valerie Steele is an expert in the history of the style.

Reciprocity

Two goths in Victorian-inspired clothing

Goth fashion has a reciprocal relationship with the fashion world. In the later part of the first decade of the 21st century, designers such as Alexander McQueen, Anna Sui, Rick Owens, Gareth Pugh, Ann Demeulemeester, Philipp Plein, Hedi Slimane, John Richmond, John Galliano, Olivier Theyskens and Yohji Yamamoto brought elements of goth to runways. This was described as "Haute Goth" by Cintra Wilson in the New York Times.

Thierry Mugler, Claude Montana, Jean Paul Gaultier and Christian Lacroix have also been associated with the fashion trend. In Spring 2004, Riccardo Tisci, Jean Paul Gaultier, Raf Simons and Stefano Pilati dressed their models as "glamorous ghouls dressed in form-fitting suits and coal-tinted cocktail dresses". Swedish designer Helena Horstedt and jewelry artist Hanna Hedman also practice a goth aesthetic.

Films and television

Main article: Gothic film
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Film poster for The Hunger, an influence in the early days of the goth subculture

Some of the early gothic rock and deathrock artists adopted traditional horror film images and drew on horror film soundtracks for inspiration. Their audience responded by adopting appropriate dress and props. Use of standard horror film props such as swirling smoke, rubber bats, and cobwebs featured as gothic club décor from the beginning in The Batcave. Such references in bands' music and images were originally tongue-in-cheek, but as time went on, bands and members of the subculture took the connection more seriously. As a result, morbid, supernatural and occult themes became more noticeably serious in the subculture. The interconnection between horror and goth was highlighted in its early days by The Hunger, a 1983 vampire film starring David Bowie, Catherine Deneuve and Susan Sarandon. The film featured gothic rock group Bauhaus performing Bela Lugosi's Dead in a nightclub. Tim Burton created a storybook atmosphere filled with darkness and shadow in some of his films like Beetlejuice (1988), Batman (1989), Edward Scissorhands (1990), Batman Returns (1992) and the stop motion films The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993), which was produced/co-written by Burton, and Corpse Bride (2005), which he co-produced. The Nickelodeon cartoon Invader Zim is also based on the goth subculture.

As the subculture became well-established, the connection between goth and horror fiction became almost a cliché, with goths quite likely to appear as characters in horror novels and film. For example, The Craft, The Crow, The Matrix and Underworld film series drew directly on goth music and style. The dark comedies Beetlejuice, The Faculty, American Beauty, Wedding Crashers, and a few episodes of the animated TV show South Park portray or parody the goth subculture. In South Park, several of the fictional schoolchildren are depicted as goths. The goth kids on the show are depicted as finding it annoying to be confused with the Hot Topic "vampire" kids from the episode "The Ungroundable" in season 12, and even more frustrating to be compared with emo kids. The goth kids are usually depicted listening to gothic music, writing or reading Gothic poetry, drinking coffee, flipping their hair, and smoking.

Morticia Addams from The Addams Family created by Charles Addams is a fictional character and the mother in the Addams Family. Morticia was played by Carolyn Jones in the 1964 television show The Addams Family and by Anjelica Huston in the 1991 version, and voiced by Charlize Theron in 2019 animated film.

A recurring sketch in the 1990s on NBC's Saturday Night Live was Goth Talk, in which a public access channel broadcast hosted by unpopular young goths would continually be interrupted by the more "normal" kids in school. The sketch featured series regulars Will Ferrell, Molly Shannon, and Chris Kattan.

Books and magazines

Main article: Gothic fiction

A prominent American literary influence on the gothic scene was provided by Anne Rice's re-imagining of the vampire in 1976. In The Vampire Chronicles, Rice's characters were depicted as self-tormentors who struggled with alienation, loneliness, and the human condition. Not only did the characters torment themselves, but they also depicted a surreal world that focused on uncovering its splendour. These Chronicles assumed goth attitudes, but they were not intentionally created to represent the gothic subculture. Their romance, beauty, and erotic appeal attracted many goth readers, making her works popular from the 1980s through the 1990s. While Goth has embraced Vampire literature both in its 19th century form and in its later incarnations, Rice's postmodern take on the vampire mythos has had a "special resonance" in the subculture. Her vampire novels feature intense emotions, period clothing, and "cultured decadence". Her vampires are socially alienated monsters, but they are also stunningly attractive. Rice's goth readers tend to envision themselves in much the same terms and view characters like Lestat de Lioncourt as role models.

Richard Wright's novel Native Son contains gothic imagery and themes that demonstrate the links between blackness and the gothic; themes and images of "premonitions, curses, prophecies, spells, veils, demonic possessions, graves, skeletons" are present, suggesting gothic influence. Other classic themes of the gothic are present in the novel, such as transgression and unstable identities of race, class, gender, and nationality.

The re-imagining of the vampire continued with the release of Poppy Z. Brite's book Lost Souls in October 1992. Despite the fact that Brite's first novel was criticized by some mainstream sources for allegedly "lack a moral center: neither terrifyingly malevolent supernatural creatures nor (like Anne Rice's protagonists) tortured souls torn between good and evil, these vampires simply add blood-drinking to the amoral panoply of drug abuse, problem drinking and empty sex practiced by their human counterparts", many of these so-called "human counterparts" identified with the teen angst and goth music references therein, keeping the book in print. Upon release of a special 10th anniversary edition of Lost Souls, Publishers Weekly—the same periodical that criticized the novel's "amorality" a decade prior—deemed it a "modern horror classic" and acknowledged that Brite established a "cult audience".

The 2002 release 21st Century Goth by Mick Mercer, an author, noted music journalist and leading historian of gothic rock, explored the modern state of the goth scene around the world, including South America, Japan, and mainland Asia. His previous 1997 release, Hex Files: The Goth Bible, similarly took an international look at the subculture.

In the US, Propaganda was a gothic subculture magazine founded in 1982. In Italy, Ver Sacrum covers the Italian goth scene, including fashion, sexuality, music, art and literature. Some magazines, such as the now-defunct Dark Realms and Goth Is Dead included goth fiction and poetry. Other magazines cover fashion (e.g., Gothic Beauty); music (e.g., Severance) or culture and lifestyle (e.g., Althaus e-zine).

On 31 October 2011, ECW Press published the Encyclopedia Gothica written by author and poet Liisa Ladouceur with illustrations done by Gary Pullin. This non-fiction book describes over 600 words and phrases relevant to Goth subculture.

Brian Craddock's 2017 novel Eucalyptus Goth charts a year in the life of a household of 20-somethings in Brisbane, Australia. The central characters are deeply entrenched in the local gothic subculture, with the book exploring themes relevant to the characters, notably unemployment, mental health, politics, and relationships.

In 2023, several books about the music genre and the subculture, were released. John Robb's The Art of Darkness: The History of Goth was hailed in The Times as a "new magestrial survey", and Cathi Unsworth's Season of the Witch: The Book of Goth was praised in Mojo as a "superb history of the dark and all its risings".

Graphic art

Further information: New Gothic

Visual contemporary graphic artists with this aesthetic include Gerald Brom, Dave McKean, and Trevor Brown as well as illustrators Edward Gorey, Charles Addams, Lorin Morgan-Richards, and James O'Barr. The artwork of Polish surrealist painter Zdzisław Beksiński is often described as gothic. British artist Anne Sudworth published a book on gothic art in 2007.

Events

A poster for the 2007 Drop Dead Festival

There are large annual goth-themed festivals in Germany, including Wave-Gotik-Treffen in Leipzig and M'era Luna in Hildesheim, both annually attracting tens of thousands of people. Castle Party is the biggest goth festival in Poland.

Interior design

In the 1980s, goths decorated their walls and ceilings with black fabrics and accessories like rosaries, crosses and plastic roses. Black furniture and cemetery-related objects such as candlesticks, death lanterns and skulls were also part of their interior design. In the 1990s, the interior design approach of the 1980s was replaced by a less macabre style.

Sociology

Gender and sexuality

Since the late 1970s, the UK goth scene refused "traditional standards of sexual propriety" and accepted and celebrated "unusual, bizarre or deviant sexual practices". In the 2000s, many members "claim overlapping memberships in the queer, polyamorous, bondage-discipline/sadomasochism, and pagan communities".

Though sexual empowerment is not unique to women in the goth scene, it remains an important part of many goth women's experience: The scene's "celebration of active sexuality" enables goth women to "resist mainstream notions of passive femininity". They have an "active sexuality" approach which creates "gender egalitarianism" within the scene, as it "allows them to engage in sexual play with multiple partners while sidestepping most of the stigma and dangers that women who engage in such behavior" outside the scene frequently incur, while continuing to "see themselves as strong".

Men dress up in an androgynous way: "Men 'gender blend,' wearing makeup and skirts". In contrast, the "women are dressed in sexy feminine outfits" that are "highly sexualized" and which often combine "corsets with short skirts and fishnet stockings". Androgyny is common among the scene: "androgyny in Goth subcultural style often disguises or even functions to reinforce conventional gender roles". It was only "valorised" for male goths, who adopt a "feminine" appearance, including "make-up, skirts and feminine accessories" to "enhance masculinity" and facilitate traditional heterosexual courting roles.

Identity

Main article: Mall goth

While goth is a music-based scene, the goth subculture is also characterized by particular aesthetics, outlooks, and a "way of seeing and of being seen". In more recent years, goths have been able to meet people with similar interests, learn from each other and take part in the scene through social media, manifesting in the same practices which take place in goth clubs. This is not a new phenomenon since before the rise of social media online forums had the same function for goths. Observers have raised the issue of to what degree individuals are truly members of the goth subculture. On one end of the spectrum is the "Uber goth", a person who is described as seeking a pallor so much that they apply "as much white foundation and white powder as possible". On the other end of the spectrum exists what another writer terms "poseurs" – "goth wannabes, usually young kids going through a goth phase who do not hold to goth sensibilities but want to be part of the goth crowd". It has been said that a "mall goth" is a teen who dresses in a goth style and spends time in malls with a Hot Topic store, but who does not know much about goth subculture or its music, thus making them a poseur. In one case, even a well-known performer has been labelled with the pejorative term – a "number of goths, especially those who belonged to this subculture before the late-1980s, reject Marilyn Manson as a poseur who undermines the true meaning of goth".

Media and academic commentary

The BBC described academic research that indicated that goths are "refined and sensitive, keen on poetry and books, not big on drugs or anti-social behaviour". Teens often stay in the subculture "into their adult life", and they are likely to become well-educated and enter professions such as medicine or law. The subculture carries on appealing to teenagers who are looking for meaning and for identity. The scene teaches teens that there are difficult aspects to life that you "have to make an attempt to understand" or explain.

The Guardian reported that a "glue binding the scene together was drug use"; however, in the scene, drug use was varied. Goth is one of the few subculture movements that is not associated with a single drug, in the way that the Hippie subculture is associated with cannabis and the Mod subculture is associated with amphetamines. A 2006 study of young goths found that those with higher levels of goth identification had higher drug use.

Perception on nonviolence

A study conducted by the University of Glasgow, involving 1,258 youth interviewed at ages 11, 13, 15 and 19, found goth subculture to be strongly nonviolent and tolerant, thus providing "valuable social and emotional support" to teens vulnerable to self harm and mental illness.

School shootings

In the weeks following the 1999 Columbine High School massacre, media reports about the teen gunmen, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, portrayed them as part of a gothic cult. An increased suspicion of goth subculture subsequently manifested in the media. This led to a moral panic over teen involvement in goth subculture and a number of other activities, such as violent video games. Harris and Klebold had initially been thought to be members of "The Trenchcoat Mafia", an informal club within Columbine High School. Later, such characterizations were considered incorrect.

Media reported that the gunman in the 2006 Dawson College shooting in Montreal, Quebec, Kimveer Singh Gill, was interested in goth subculture. Gill's self-professed love of Goth culture was the topic of media interest, and it was widely reported that the word "Goth", in Gill's writings, was a reference to the alternative industrial and goth subculture rather than a reference to gothic rock music. Gill, who committed suicide after the attack, wrote in his online journal: "I'm so sick of hearing about jocks and preps making life hard for the goths and others who look different, or are different". Gill described himself in his profile on Vampirefreaks.com as "Trench  the Angel of Death" and he stated that "Metal and Goth kick ass". An image gallery on Gill's Vampirefreaks.com blog had photos of him pointing a gun at the camera or wearing a long black trench coat.

Mick Mercer stated that Gill was "not a Goth. Never a Goth. The bands he listed as his chosen form of ear-bashing were relentlessly metal and standard grunge, rock and goth metal, with some industrial presence". Mercer stated that "Kimveer Gill listened to metal", "He had nothing whatsoever to do with Goth" and further commented "I realise that like many Neos , Kimveer Gill may even have believed he somehow was a Goth, because they're only really noted for spectacularly missing the point".

Prejudice and violence directed at goths

In part because of public misunderstanding surrounding gothic aesthetics, people in the goth subculture sometimes suffer prejudice, discrimination, and intolerance. As is the case with members of various other subcultures and alternative lifestyles, outsiders sometimes marginalize goths, either by intention or by accident. Actress Christina Hendricks talked of being bullied as a goth at school and how difficult it was for her to deal with societal pressure: "Kids can be pretty judgmental about people who are different. But instead of breaking down and conforming, I stood firm. That is also probably why I was unhappy. My mother was mortified and kept telling me how horrible and ugly I looked. Strangers would walk by with a look of shock on their face, so I never felt pretty. I just always felt awkward".

On 11 August 2007, while walking through Stubbylee Park in Bacup, Lancashire, a young couple, Sophie Lancaster and Robert Maltby, were attacked by a group of teenagers. Lancaster subsequently died from the severe head injuries she suffered in the attack. It later emerged that the attackers had attacked the couple because they were goths. On 29 April 2008, two of the attackers, Ryan Herbert and Brendan Harris, were convicted for the murder of Lancaster and given life sentences. Three others were given lesser sentences for the assault on her boyfriend Robert Maltby. In delivering the sentence, Judge Anthony Russell stated, "This was a hate crime against these completely harmless people targeted because their appearance was different to yours". He went on to defend the goth community, calling goths "perfectly peaceful, law-abiding people who pose no threat to anybody". Judge Russell added that he "recognised it as a hate crime without Parliament having to tell him to do so and had included that view in his sentencing". Despite this ruling, a bill to add discrimination based on subculture affiliation to the definition of hate crime in British law was not presented to parliament.

In 2013, police in Manchester announced they would be treating attacks on members of alternative subcultures, such as goths, the same as they do for attacks based on race, religion, and sexual orientation.

A more recent phenomenon is the emergence of goth YouTubers who very often address the prejudice and violence against goths. These personalities create videos as a response to problems that they personally face, which include challenges such as bullying, and dealing with negative descriptions of themselves. Viewers often engage closely with these YouTubers, asking them for advice on how to deal with related personal struggles and getting responses in the form of personal messages or videos. These interactions take the form of an informal mentoring which contributes to the building of solidarity within the goth scene.

Self-harm study

A study published on the British Medical Journal concluded that "identification as belonging to the Goth subculture was the best predictor of self harm and attempted suicide ", and that it was most possibly due to self-selection, with people committing self harm joining the goth subculture in order to get support from individuals with similar experiences.

According to The Guardian, some goth teens are more likely to harm themselves or attempt suicide. A medical journal study of 1,300 Scottish schoolchildren until their teen years found that the 53% of the 25 goth teens sampled had attempted to harm themselves and 47% had attempted suicide. The study found that the "correlation was stronger than any other predictor".

The authors held that most self-harm by teens was done before joining the subculture, and that joining the subculture would actually protect them and help them deal with distress in their lives, while cautioning that the study was based on a small sample size and needed replication to confirm the results. The study was criticized for using only a small sample of goth teens and not taking into account other influences and differences between types of goths.

See also

References

Citations

  1. Nym, Alexander: Schillerndes Dunkel. Geschichte, Entwicklung und Themen der Gothic-Szene, Plöttner Verlag 2010, ISBN 3-862-11006-0, pp. 145–169
  2. Farin, Klaus; Wallraff, Kirsten; Archiv der Jugendkulturen e.V., Berlin (1999). Die Gothics: Interviews, Fotografien (Orig.-Ausg. ed.). Bad Tölz: Tilsner. p. 23. ISBN 9783933773098.
  3. John Stickney (24 October 1967). "Four Doors to the Future: Gothic Rock Is Their Thing". The Williams Record. Posted at "The Doors : Articles & Reviews Year 1967". Mildequator.com. Archived from the original on 4 May 2013. Retrieved 3 October 2012. "The Doors are not pleasant, amusing hippies proffering a grin and a flower; they wield a knife with a cold and terrifying edge. The Doors are closely akin to the national taste for violence, and the power of their music forces each listener to realize what violence is in himself".... "The Doors met New York for better or for worse at a press conference in the gloomy vaulted wine cellar of the Delmonico hotel, the perfect room to honor the Gothic rock of the Doors".
  4. Loder, Kurt (December 1984). V.U. (album liner notes). Verve Records.
  5. Kent, Nick (29 July 1978). "Banshees make the Breakthrough live review – London the Roundhouse 23 July 1978". NME.
  6. Kent, Nick (31 March 1979). "Magazine's Mad Minstrels Gains Momentum (Album review)". NME. p. 31.
  7. "Something Else [featuring Joy Division]". BBC television . 15 September 1979. Archived from the original on 11 December 2021. Because it is unsettling, it is like sinister and gothic, it won't be played.
  8. Reynolds 2005, p. 352.
  9. ^ Reynolds 2005, p. 432.
  10. Des Moines (26 October 1979). "Live review by Des Moines (Joy Division Leeds)". Sounds. Curtis may project like an ambidextrous barman puging his physical hang-ups, but the 'Gothic dance music' he orchestrates is well-understood by those who recognise their New Wave frontiersmen and know how to dance the Joy Division! A theatrical sense of timing, controlled improvisation...
  11. Bohn, Chris. "Northern gloom: 2 Southern stomp: 1. (Joy Division: University of London Union – Live Review)". Melody Maker (16 February 1980). Joy Division are masters of this Gothic gloom
  12. Savage, Jon (July 1994). "Joy Division: Someone Take These Dreams Away". Mojo via Rock's Backpages (subscription required). Retrieved 10 July 2014. a definitive Northern Gothic statement: guilt-ridden, romantic, claustrophobic
  13. ^ Keaton, Steve (21 February 1981). "The Face of Punk Gothique". Sounds.
  14. Spracklen, Karl; Spracklen, Beverley (2018). The Evolution of Goth Culture: The Origins and Deeds of the New Goths. Emerald Publishing. p. 46. The F-Club and the Futurama festival, both set up and run by Leeds promoter, John Keenan, have become entrenched in the shared memory of post-punks and goths as spaces where goth rock was born in the form it is now known.
    Stewart, Ethan (13 January 2021). "How Leeds Led Goth". PopMatters. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
    Deboick, Sophia (17 September 2020). "A City in Music – Leeds: Goth ground zero". The New European. Archived from the original on 22 January 2021. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
  15. Johnson, David (February 1983). "69 Dean Street: The Making of Club Culture". The Face. No. 34. p. 26. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  16. North, Richard (19 February 1983). "Punk Warriors". NME.
  17. Ohanesian, Liz (4 November 2009). "The LA Deathrock Starter Guide". LA Weekly. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 10 July 2014.
  18. Reynolds 2005, p. 429.
  19. Reynolds 2005, p. 421.
  20. Mason, Stewart. "Pornography – The Cure : Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards : AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved 27 October 2012.
  21. Reynolds 2005, p. 431.
  22. Reynolds 2005, p. 435.
  23. Rambali, Paul. "A Rare Glimpse into A Private World". The Face (July 1983). Curtis' death wrapped an already mysterious group in legend. From the press eulogies, you would think Curtis had gone to join Chatterton, Rimbaud and Morrison in the hallowed hall of premature harvests. To a group with several strong Gothic characteristics was added a further piece of romance.
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Bibliography

Further reading

  • Baddeley, Gavin (2002). Goth Chic: A Connoisseur's Guide to Dark Culture. Plexus. ISBN 978-0-85965-308-4.
  • Brill, Dunja (2008). Goth Culture: Gender, Sexuality and Style. Oxford: Berg Publishers.
  • Catalyst, Clint (2000). Cottonmouth Kisses. San Francisco, California: Manic D Press. ISBN 978-0-916397-65-4.
    A first-person account of an individual's life within the Goth subculture.
  • Davenport-Hines, Richard (1999). Gothic: Four Hundred Years of Excess, Horror, Evil and Ruin. New York: North Port Press. ISBN 978-0-86547-590-8.
    A chronological/aesthetic history of Goth covering the spectrum from Gothic architecture to the Cure.
  • Digitalis, Raven (2007). Goth Craft: The Magickal Side of Dark Culture. Woodbury, Minnesota: Llewellyn Publications. ISBN 978-0-7387-1104-1.
    Includes a lengthy explanation of Gothic history, music, fashion, and proposes a link between mystic/magical spirituality and dark subcultures.
  • Fuentes Rodríguez, César (2007). Mundo Gótico (in Spanish). Quarentena Ediciones. ISBN 978-84-933891-6-1.
    Covering literature, music, cinema, BDSM, fashion, and subculture topics.
  • Hodkinson, Paul (2002). Goth: Identity, Style and Subculture. Oxford: Berg Publishers. ISBN 978-1-85973-600-5.
  •  ———  (2005). "Communicating Goth: On-line Media". In Gelder, Ken (ed.). The Subcultures Reader (2nd ed.). London: Routledge. pp. 567–574. ISBN 978-0-415-34416-6.
  • Mercer, Mick (1996). Hex Files: The Goth Bible. London: Batsford. ISBN 978-0-7134-8033-7.
    An international survey of the Goth scene.
  •  ———  (2002). 21st Century Goth. London: Reynolds & Hearn. ISBN 978-1-903111-28-4.
    An exploration of the modern state of the Goth subculture worldwide.
  • Scharf, Natasha (2011). Worldwide Gothic: A Chronicle of a Tribe. Church Stretton, England: Independent Music Press. ISBN 978-1-906191-19-1.
    A global view of the goth scene from its birth in the late 1970s to the present day.
  • Vas, Abdul (2012). For Those About to Power. Madrid: T.F. Editores. ISBN 978-84-15253-52-5.
  • Venters, Jillian (2009). Gothic Charm School: An Essential Guide for Goths and Those Who Love Them. Illustrated by Venters, Pete. New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-166916-3.
    An etiquette guide to "gently persuade others in her chosen subculture that being a polite Goth is much, much more subversive than just wearing T-shirts with "edgy" sayings on them".
  • Voltaire (2004). What is Goth?. Boston: Weiser Books. ISBN 978-1-57863-322-7.
    An illustrated view of the goth subculture.
Goth subculture
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Notable events
Art and fashion
Film and literature
See also
Gothic
Ancient
Late medieval
Romanticism
Modern literature
and art
Modern subculture,
music and film
See also
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