Preview

‘in Dracula, Lucy Represents a 19th Century Ideal of Femininity, Whereas Mina Embodies a More Modern View of the Role of Women’.

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1627 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
‘in Dracula, Lucy Represents a 19th Century Ideal of Femininity, Whereas Mina Embodies a More Modern View of the Role of Women’.
‘In Dracula, Lucy represents a 19th century ideal of femininity, whereas Mina embodies a more modern view of the role of women’.

To what extent do you agree?

Stoker’s presentation of the differences between Mina and Lucy provokes the debate about whether Lucy is intended to represent a traditional female role, with Mina being her modern counterpart. A typical depiction of life for a 19th century woman involved staying at home to look after their families; whereas, 20th century women secured greater independence and equality. While, at first glance, there’s greater evidence of these aspects of modern femininity in Mina, it’s worth noting that, despite acting autonomously and being respected by men, Mina’s actions in Dracula serve the purpose of aiding her husband’s struggle. Additionally, Lucy’s sexuality could be regarded as more modern, but, in succumbing to Dracula, she appears to lack the poise Mina possesses.

The nature of Mina and Lucy’s relationships with men differs greatly. Mina’s character incorporates the modern role of women; in many ways she appears equal to the men around her. “She has man’s brain - a brain that a man should have were he much gifted - and a woman’s heart”. This demonstrates the respect Mina acquires through her contributions in the fight against Dracula; however, Van Helsing’s comparison of Mina to a man shows that Victorian society was still strongly influenced by gender stereotypes: men were intelligent and women were caring. Mina’s acceptance into the male world is only down to her possession of ‘male’ characteristics, namely, intelligence. Perhaps this supports the idea that Mina does embody a more modern view of the role of women. This view may have been so modern that society hadn’t adjusted to it; therefore, to express the extent of her intelligence a comparison to a man is necessary.

Despite this, some aspects of Mina’s relationships with men remain traditional, such as the long quest to restore her purity.



References: Sparknotes - Dracula Oxford World’s Classics - Dracula by Bram Stoker Critical Anthology - Feminism Eszter Muskovits - The Split Concept of Womanhood in Bram Stoker’s Dracula Our Mutual Friend by Charles Dickens ----------------------- [1] In the Twilight saga, for example, Stephanie Meyer displays human women as plain as opposed to the female vampires, who are terrifyingly beautiful. [2] The name given to Lizzie Hexham - A character renowned for self-sacrifice in Our Mutual Friend by Charles Dickens

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    ‘the new woman was persistently represented as a hysteric, whose degenerate emotionalism was both symptom and cause of social change. As symptom, her hysteria was a degenerate form of her natural affections. It was also thought to be a form of brain-poisoning induced by the pressures of modern life and by women’s attempts to resist their traditional roles and ape those of men’. Hysteria disabled women and prevented them from fulfilling their ‘natural’ roles of wives and mothers’. -102. Lucy is perhaps the most obviously modelled on the notions of hysteria prevalent in Stoker’s age. She appears excitable, restless and uneasy with an undefined anguish. We also hear of her physical and mental…

    • 237 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    As a romanticist, Vlad does not instantaneously take Mina by force. Instead, he approaches her as a captivating stranger and courts her until Mina falls in love with him. Yet, when she is ensnared within his grasp, he tells her, “I love you too much to condemn you,” but Mina insists that she wants to be with him and voluntarily drinks his blood. Dracula is not an evil entity but a “man” in love who is prepared to sacrifice this chance to be reunited with his beloved…

    • 1427 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the context of passive female characters, it is interesting to note that Mary Shelley’s mother, Mary Wollstonecraft, was the author of the strongly feminist A Vindication of the Rights of Woman. One can argue that Frankenstein represents a rejection of the male attempt to usurp (by unnatural means) what is properly a female endeavor—birth. One can also interpret the novel as a broader rejection of the aggressive, rational, and male-dominated science of the late seventeenth and early eighteenth century. Though it was long met with mistrust, this science increasingly shaped European society. In this light, Frankenstein can be seen as prioritizing traditional female domesticity with its emphasis on family and interpersonal…

    • 113 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    At one point in the movie, Mina is shown in a dark red dress that is more revealing than what would be considered modest. Not only are her clothes different, but her now subdued sexual desires for Dracula make her unfaithful to her husband. Copolla, by creating this romance between Dracula and Mina ultimately creates a side to the story that is completely unexpected. Having Mina as the reincarnation of Elisabeta (Ryder) creates a way for Dracula to escape what he has become. Through the power of love, Mina is able to kill Dracula and free him from his endless terror. Having the movie end with both Dracula and Mina (Elisabeta) at the alter creates the illusion that things have finally come full circle, and all can finally be…

    • 1185 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    These women can suddenly take the male prerogative to instate an encounter that is inherently sexual, and penetrate their victim (with their fangs). This destabilisation of gender roles is not limited to female people receiving phallic symbols however; the vampire itself completely reverses the stereotypical roles of men and women in the Gothic story. The women become predators, dangerous creatures to be hunted and feared; the men are the prey and they crack under the pressure and become hysterical on several occasions, the “stalwart manhood seemed to have shrunk somewhat under the strain of his much tired emotions” [Stoker, p.181]. After Lucy is killed, Dr. Seward must comfort Arthur Holmwood in the funeral parlour when he “suddenly [breaks] down, and threw his arms round my shoulders and laid his head on my breast, crying,” [Stoker, p.181]. Whereas when Mina is told of Lucy’s death, she shows “courage and resolution in her bearing” [Stoker, p.240], and is determined to tell the full story of their fight against Dracula, even if recording the death of her friend upsets…

    • 1817 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    During his time in Castle Dracula, Jonathan Harker encounters three vampire women when he falls asleep in what used to be a lady’s sitting room. When he awakens in the middle of the night, Jonathan sees three women in the room and two send the third to ‘kiss him’. Before she is able to, Dracula appears and drives them off, leaving Jonathan to wonder if the whole experience was merely a dream. The whole experience sets off Jonathan’s curiosity and drives him to continue exploring the castle and eventually escape Dracula altogether. This experience also instills the fear of vampires in Jonathan that causes him to have a breakdown multiple times, the fear that is only dispelled when Mina herself must be rescued from Dracula’s clutches. This instance…

    • 373 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Sexual Objects In Dracula

    • 334 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The frequently used concepts in Dracula to objectify women as sexual objects, gives the reader an insight into Stoker’s ways on implementing the Victorian male imagination and society’s extremely rigid expectations for a female. In the Victorian era, the women had only two scarce choices to choose from, either be a virgin – which basically consisted of being a role model of purity and innocence – or a respected wife and mother. If women did not met these socially acceptable standards they were either seen as a harlot who had no self-respect or did not deserved any respect whatsoever. Men commonly in the Victorian era, as Bram Stoker regularly refers to, strongly believed to have a higher stand that any other women, Limiting women was very common…

    • 334 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Despite this quality, they still do not think that she should come along with them on their trip to seek out and kill Dracula. Instead, they leave her at home to sit in her room and wait to hear if any of her friends have been harmed or killed. They also ask that she acts as the secretary during their meeting, a job which she most likely brought on herself by volunteering to write up everyone’s journal entries beforehand. Mina does seem to think of herself in these same sexist ways, although she does her best to turn away from it. When Quincy accidentally shoots the window to try and kill the bat, Mina is the first to cry out, and she shames herself for being such a coward. Despite these leanings toward sexism, I feel that Stoker did a pretty good job at creating a strong female character given the time period that he wrote…

    • 561 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    This transformation is apparent in Lucy, who is at first a sweet little girl. After each encounter with Dracula, Lucy’s “canine teeth grow longer and sharper than the rest” (Stoker). Lucy begins to develop traits of an animal when she loosens her sexuality each time she ventures out into the night to meet Dracula. Lucy’s metamorphosis into a grotesque vampire is meant to discourage sexual women, since Lucy begins to look repulsive when she crosses the line of sexual propriety. Also, it becomes evident that hypersexuality dehumanizes a woman. The vampire woman “licks her lips like an animal” and laps it against “her white sharp teeth” in order to seduce Jonathan (Stoker). The three vampire sisters that prey on Jonathan are mesmerizing but possess animal-like qualities that are associated with hypersexual women. A woman that is too promiscuous turns into a bloodthirsty beast, a reason why her sexuality must be repressed. In addition, critics state that the way Stoker describes sexual women suggests that they are not true women. Stoker portrays sexual women as “Un-Dead, fragmenting them into disembodied physical features” (Swartz-Levine). A woman’s sexuality is what turns her into a vampire, stripping her womanhood from her. Therefore, as women unveil their sexuality, they transform into monstrous beings that stray from the standards of Victorian…

    • 973 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Shelley presents a completely gendered representation of domestic women, set forth directly in the Frankenstein family. Caroline Beaufort, subjected by societal expectations, complies with her role as a domestic female. She takes it upon herself to act as a “guardian angel” (27), feeding attention and support, nurturing and tending to the needs of her husband and children. As an act of this domesticity, she gives Elizabeth to Victor as a “pretty present,” who, in turn, “looked upon Elizabeth as [his] – [his] to protect, love, and cherish” (28). Yielding to Shelley’s idea of gendered inequality, Elizabeth is seen merely as a possession, an object given as a present to the firstborn male, despite originally being the daughter of a nobleman. Similarly, Justine’s role as a servant for the Frankenstein family degrades her existence to solely, property. With a low-born status intersected with the notions of gender and race, her form of life deems inevitable. These women, confined in their domestic roles, consequently have no access to the outside, unable to coexist with the world of public affairs.…

    • 741 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    These societal expectations were evident in the portrayals of characters in the literature of the day. The extent to which society affected social behavior, especially in women, can be exposed by comparing the personality of the same character as written in two different novels. Such was the case of Mina Harker. In Dracula, Mina was an intelligent, forward thinking woman who never reached her full potential because of the suffocating moral code of the day. Yet, in The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Mina Murray was free of the suffocating confines of the Victorian class structure. Whether because she rejected the notion that anyone else could restrict her rights, or because she surrounded herself with others who gave her the room to make the most of her talents, Mina lived by her own rules and her companions could appreciate and admire her strength and skills without feeling threatened by them. The difference between these two portrayals of the same woman was caused by the adherence to a moral and social code by one, but not by the…

    • 1619 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Other than being remade into other forms such as movies and cartoons, Dracula was a relatively new concept during the time of its publication and had a major impact to its surrounding society. Today, the novel’s uses of multiple unique elements of writing such as dramatic irony, the everyman, and suspense/mystery continues to speak to interests of readers. In addition, the character itself, like any other supernatural beings including ghosts and witches, naturally intriguing us just based on many people’s love of getting scared; Dracula is portrayed in the novel as a completely evil and manipulative character that feasts upon the lives of mortals for his survival. Throughout the course of “Dracula,” Stoker used an epistolary form of writing not only for its prevalence in the Victorian era, but also for its effectiveness in portraying first person point-of-views and first-hand accounts for multiple characters. By doing so, he was able to make readers feel as if they themselves could have been in the characters’ shoes. Because it was an epistolary format and readers knew exactly what each character knew and did not know, his application of dramatic irony became clearer than other literary pieces as well. Dramatic irony was used in the course of the novel in multiple ways. The Victorian readers already knew of the vampire concept by the 18th century and Dracula was written in the early-mid 19th century. As they read the novel, they generally would have known what Dracula was, and had a similar idea to what we think now, before Jonathan Harker’s realization of Dracula’s intentions (Stoker 22). Another way dramatic irony was added in the novel was the placement of each journal. For instance, readers were notified first of Jonathan’s experiences in his journal and then Mina’s journal was revealed with her wondering about the condition of her finace (Stoker 27,…

    • 1029 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Lucy In Dracula

    • 558 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In Bram Stoker’s novel, Dracula, Stoker portrays many different aspects of women’s roles in the nineteenth century. Women had a strictly defined role within the era; there was no thought of equality, no thought that women could liberate themselves sexually. Stoker uses women in this novel to critique against women’s liberation. Stoker’s portrayal of women makes the novel seem like a fantasy. Women are primarily objects of delicate beauty who occasionally need to be rescued from danger. In the novel Mina Murray is the embodiment of Victorian virtue in which she is loyal, earnest, innocent, and dependent of her husband. Stoker creates another character, Lucy Westenra who is completely opposite of Mina. Lucy is embodies the desire of women who want to liberate themselves. Only Mina shows any considerable strength or resourcefulness. Lucy is primarily two-dimensional victim, picture of perfection who is easy for Dracula to prey upon.…

    • 558 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Victorian ideology of women is centered on the oppression of females and the idea that a woman’s sole purpose and duty in life is to be obedient and compliant to her husband. It was believed that “New Women” who stepped out of the ideal Victorian role were whores, unfit mothers and brides, and would ultimately cause chaos. In Bram Stoker’s, Dracula, Lucy and the three seductive vampires serve as women who step out of their Victorian role and are in turn punished for their actions.…

    • 771 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Count Dracula Analysis

    • 1009 Words
    • 5 Pages

    While Count Dracula is prominently reckoned as an opposition within a methodical society, he can somehow exemplify a potential alteration for oppressed women against the Victorian’s standardized expectations. In the primary introduction of Mina and Lucy’s appearance, the two female characters express a vast ideology of obedient and pure Victorian women. Both of them desire to wholly love and marry whomever they want without feeling oppressed by the expectations that society imposes on them. After Count Dracula corrupts Lucy to become a vampire of her own, her sexual desire commences to expand, and she deviates herself from the norms within the Victorian society. In chapter 15, Dr. Seward anxiously states, “She still advanced, however, and with…

    • 1009 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays