Saturday, December 21, 2019
Dracul A Fundamental Step Stone For Horror Literature
Written and set in the Victorian era, Bram Stokerââ¬â¢s novel Dracula is a fundamental stepping-stone for horror literature. Unlike most novels of its time, Dracula not only showcased the ideals of its era, but it completely flipped it on its head. Firstly, there are numerous examples of female sexuality and symbolism throughout the entire novel. In Victorian society, it was believed that women had no sex drive and only partook in sex when their male partners insisted. It was unheard of for a female to be sexually assertive in any way, and such an idea would likely have been a very disturbing and frightening concept to a conservative society. Needless to say, women often had to suppress their sexual desires during this period in order to keepâ⬠¦show more contentâ⬠¦But along with along with being depicted as a traditional woman, she also represents the ââ¬Å"new womanâ⬠of the time. Whereas Minaââ¬â¢s traditional woman aspects are more so depicted through her senti ments and principles, her ââ¬Å"new womanâ⬠aspects are depicted through her intelligence. Mina is regarded to as a ââ¬Å"new womanâ⬠due to her job as an assistant schoolmistress, seeing as to most women who worked were in order to make ends meat if their husbands were sick or injured and typically were jobs requiring manual labor. Stoker basically wrote Mina to represent the ideal Victorian woman with even Van Helsing praising her saying that she is ââ¬Å"one of Godââ¬â¢s women, fashioned by His own hand to show us men and other women that there is a heaven where we can enter, and that its light can be here on earth. So true, so sweet, so nobleâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ (Stoker 114), but she is also simultaneously classified a ââ¬Å"new womanâ⬠. She is the only female character who keeps the Victorian ideals constant throughout the novel, even after being ââ¬Å"vampedâ⬠by Dracula and being confronted later on by his three brides. Now where Mina is the quintessenti al Victorian woman, Draculaââ¬â¢s three brides are on the complete opposite side of the spectrum, the real ââ¬Å"new womenâ⬠. They were completely sexual every time they showed up within the novel. Considering the high standards of purity Mina was held to due to her common Victorian nature, these three were a Victorians nightmare.
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