Reading about how these authors’ works were tied to various stages of capitalism, the reader can see the connection between supernatural literature and society. By comparing these authors, Touponce also traces the development of supernatural fiction since the early 1900s. Lovecraft, and Ray Bradbury together span the length of the tumultuous twentieth century with hundreds of stories. Furthermore, he explains how each of these writers identifies modernity with capitalism in various ways and shows a concern with surpassing the limits of realism, which they see as tied to the representation of bourgeois society. In this study, Touponce confirms that these three authors conceived of storytelling as a kind of journey into the spectral. Lovecraft, and Ray Bradbury: Spectral Journeys, William Touponce examines what these three modern masters of weird fiction reveal about modernity and the condition of being modern in their tales. Beyond indicating how authors of such works derived much of their thrills from a sense of cosmic atmosphere, Lovecraft did not elaborate on what he meant by the term spectral as a form of haunted literature concerned with modernity. Lovecraft discusses the emergence of what he called spectral literature, a literature that involves the gothic themes of the supernatural found in the past but also concerned about modern society and humanity. In his classic study, Supernatural Horror in Literature, H.
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