This essay proposes a critical distinction between extrapolative Gothic and speculative Gothic. Extrapolative Gothic begins from conditions compatible with known reality and projects them toward their most extreme psychological, corporeal, social, or moral consequences. Speculative Gothic, by contrast, modifies the premises of reality itself and uses hypothesis to reorganize the relation among world, mind, fear, and possibility. The distinction is not intended as a rigid taxonomy of texts, but as an operational tool for reading Gothic narrative. Through Poe’s “The Pit and the Pendulum” and Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, the essay argues that Gothic horror may remain within the field of the real possible, or become speculative when the conditions that make horror intelligible are transformed. The essay situates speculative Gothic in relation to the fantastic, the marvelous, cognitive estrangement, supernatural Gothic, and science fiction, while preserving its specific function: the construction of hypothetical narrative conditions through which the real is not abandoned, but critically reformulated.
Sandra Voss (Tue,) studied this question.