genre (zhahn-ruh): a type of literature. We say a poem, novel,
story, or other literary work belongs to a particular genre if it shares
at least a few conventions, or standard characteristics, with other works
in that genre. For example, works in the Gothic genre often feature supernatural
elements, attempts to horrify the reader, and dark, foreboding settings,
particularly very old castles or mansions. Edgar Allan Poe's short story
"The Fall of the House of Usher" belongs to the Gothic genre because
it takes place in a gloomy mansion that seems to exert supernatural control
over a man who lives in it. Furthermore, Poe attempts to horrify the reader
by describing the man's ghastly face, the burial of his sister, eerie sounds
in the house, and ultimately the reappearance of the sister's bloody body
at the end of the story. Other genres include the pastoral poem, epic poem,
elegy, tragic drama, and bildungsroman. An understanding of genre is useful
because it helps us to see how an author adopts, subverts, or transcends
the standard practices that other authors have developed. See A Handbook
to Literature, Benet's Reader's Encyclopedia. Mark Canada,
English professor, University of North Carolina at Pembroke