The symbols employed by King in relation to Poe’s literary work of 1842 were the coloring of the black and red, western-most room, signifying death (in King’s work, the western trek to the formidable Overlook Hotel was an invitation of death to the Torrance family); the avoidance of death in the case of both Poe’s party-goers and King’s Danny and Wendy Torrance; the respective clocks striking midnight, and the mortal significance of this. The presence and influence of religion is also clear in both texts. The unclear nature of the Grady girls, and the dogman in the movie and book symbolizes the masked nature of the figure resembling the plague of the “red death,” in Poe’s story. The color red in the bathroom of the movie and blood covering the lens, also serves as a reference to the black and red room as described by Poe, and of the blood which is a symptom of the red death as it pours from pores of the ill. Signs of Stephen King’s creative genius can be found within the pages of The Shining. Edgar Allan Poe’s text, “The Masque of the Red Death,” served as a suitable theme for King’s work, both of which are now horror classics due to the detailed symbols crafted, and employed, by each astounding
The symbols employed by King in relation to Poe’s literary work of 1842 were the coloring of the black and red, western-most room, signifying death (in King’s work, the western trek to the formidable Overlook Hotel was an invitation of death to the Torrance family); the avoidance of death in the case of both Poe’s party-goers and King’s Danny and Wendy Torrance; the respective clocks striking midnight, and the mortal significance of this. The presence and influence of religion is also clear in both texts. The unclear nature of the Grady girls, and the dogman in the movie and book symbolizes the masked nature of the figure resembling the plague of the “red death,” in Poe’s story. The color red in the bathroom of the movie and blood covering the lens, also serves as a reference to the black and red room as described by Poe, and of the blood which is a symptom of the red death as it pours from pores of the ill. Signs of Stephen King’s creative genius can be found within the pages of The Shining. Edgar Allan Poe’s text, “The Masque of the Red Death,” served as a suitable theme for King’s work, both of which are now horror classics due to the detailed symbols crafted, and employed, by each astounding