Poe Compare to Manson
Essay by review • November 21, 2010 • Essay • 668 Words (3 Pages) • 1,367 Views
Though born at different times and in different places Edgar Allen Poe and Bryan Warner (Marilyn Manson) are surprising social and ideological doppelgangers. Starting as early as their childhood you can notice notable similarities. Bryan spent the majority of his time at his grandparent's house. It was a generally hostile area for young children, leaving little access to parental supervision or interaction. Poe on the other hand had no father around to begin with and his mother died when he was two. He went on to live with his mother's business associate who turned out to be quite abusive. Now due to personal problems Poe was unable to attend school any longer and didn't finish his education which had been a aspiration of Poe's to be removed. This seemed to be a similar trend between Poe and Bryan, because Manson did it as well.
Both writers were similar in there choice of work as well, and how they delivered them. Both Poe and Bryan published many works before there writing became popular. The macabre story of "The Tell-Tale Heart" by Edgar A. P. is quite similar to Bryan's first published work about himself ending up murdering and raping his sister. Obviously the chosen tone by both of these individuals is similar because they desire to put out a persona. This persona is a general feeling that each Artist expresses as a discontent
with life and society, and leads to there morbid works. Poe wrote "Poe's Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque", where Bryan published a CD "The Golden Age of Grotesque" which both turned out to be fairly similar.
On an ideological level they both consider the modern man to not be that modern. They were both haunted by something internal possibly even external that drove them nearly insane and tainted there view of all of society. Both of them had very low morality and on many accounts lusted after family members and the same sex on occasion. Poe left the Army and West Point which had been the next step in his life, he enjoyed the army in many ways ideologically speaking but still loved writing too much to not follow it. He married his first cousin against the wishes of his family and decided to make a life. Bryan decided not to go into military but still always struggled with organized religion, he also had a sexual fascination with family members. This lead to his intense spying on his grandfather (who was a sexual deviant) and
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