Mexican Gothic

by

Silvia Moreno-Garcia

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Themes and Colors
Sexism, Female Independence, and Power Theme Icon
Nature vs. Love Theme Icon
Colonialism Theme Icon
Life, Death, and Rebirth Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Mexican Gothic, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.

Sexism, Female Independence, and Power

Throughout Mexican Gothic, the protagonist, Noemí Taboada, undermines masculine forms of authority and challenges conventions surrounding outdated gender roles. She begins the novel as a socialite in Mexico City, where the only expectation of wealthy young women is that they “devote [their] time to leisure and husband hunting.” Noemí, however, is presented as somebody unwilling to simply acquiesce to such limiting expectations, which is why she dreams of pursuing a master’s degree in…

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Nature vs. Love

The Doyles of High Place believe in eugenics, a pseudoscience with the goal of genetically improving the human species by promoting certain traits through selective breeding. It should come as no surprise to readers that this field of study has been discredited as unscientific and racially biased. The Doyles, however, believe that a person’s nature is determined at birth, and that their actions in life will always be in accordance with their nature. Furthermore, they…

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Colonialism

The Doyles are a European family who moved to Mexico for the twin purposes of mining silver and harvesting mushrooms that grow in the cave under High Place. In each case, they’re reaping natural resources from the land for their own wealth and power, and they do this at the expense of the local population. Howard Doyle, the family patriarch, refers to the miners who worked for him as mulch—just as mulch is used…

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Life, Death, and Rebirth

Immortality in the novel does not come without a cost. Howard Doyle, for instance, chooses to bury his wife alive and let a powerful fungus slowly grow through her body—all because this will grant him immortality. Thus, his immortality is built from a central act of violence against a woman’s body. And though Agnes’s body is preserved in the chamber underneath the Doyle crypt, the Doyles are instructed never to look at it…

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