"Bram Stoker" Essays and Research Papers

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    Violence in Dracula

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    literature‚ violence exists to enhance the reader ’s interest in order to add a sense of excitement or conflict to a novel. This statement withholds much truthfulness due to the fact that without violence in a piece of literature such as Dracula by Bram Stoker‚ the plot would not have the same impact if it were lacking violence. So to holds true to that of the movie. The movie bares different characteristics then that of the book. First off‚ the whole ordeal with the wolf escaping and jumping into Lucy

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    Dracula's Eternal Life

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    audience‚ he remains easily relatable to this day. Dracula holds a fairly obvious place in pop culture‚ and its continued popularity and prevalence over the generations since its publication show that Bram Stoker’s characters‚ monsters‚ and message still ring true with a modern audience. Stoker designed characters and wrote about issues that remain relevant today: Dracula’s desire to improve his station‚ the gap between the rich/powerful and the poor/common‚ and the characters’ sexuality.

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    Femininity in Dracula

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    Discuss how Bram Stoker portrays femininity in Dracula? Bram Stoker uses both the female and the male characters to present femininity in Dracula. Stoker uses characters like Dracula to explore the sexuality of women and to express the idea that it is morally wrong and dangerous for a woman to be voluptuous and if she is‚ she will suffer the consequences. Additionally‚ the two most important female characters in Dracula‚ Mina Murray and Lucy Westenra‚ are used by Stoker to present different female

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    English Source Doc.

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    Title: Dracula: Stoker ’s Response to the New Woman Author(s): Carol A. Senf Publication Details: Victorian Studies 26.1 (Autumn 1982): p33-49. Source: Nineteenth-Century Literature Criticism. Ed. Jessica Bomarito and Russel Whitaker. Vol. 156. Detroit: Gale‚ 2006. From Literature Resource Center. Document Type: Critical essay Full Text: COPYRIGHT 2006 Gale‚ COPYRIGHT 2007 Gale‚ Cengage Learning Full Text:  [(essay date autumn 1982) In the following essay‚ Senf contends that‚ contrary

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    Dracula

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    The Religious Aspects of the Novel Dracula Bram Stoker‚ the author of Dracula as well as a Victorian man‚ includes religious elements in the book which explains the qualities of good and evil in the Victorian era London. Characters in the novel are Count Dracula‚ Jonathan Harker‚ Quincy Morris‚ Dr. Van Helsing‚ Mina Harker‚ and Lucy. Jonathan on his way to Dracula’s castle is the first character introduced. He is the husband of Mina‚ and the other men help him tremendously to save the town from

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    guided our class discussions and played the “devil’s advocate” to get me thinking about the opposing side of the argument more thoroughly. Finally‚ thank you to Bram Stoker and Joseph Sheridan LeFanu for writing Dracula and Carmilla. In a story‚ as conflicts and problems arise‚ the role of each individual character becomes crucial. In both Bram Stoker’s Dracula and Joseph Sheridan LeFanu’s Carmilla‚ all of the characters lives‚ personalities and motives create two stories that read alongside one another

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    Century Traditional Social Mores and Norms in Dracula Bram Stoker’s Dracula remains one of the more recognizable novels of its genre despite being published in 1897. A classic horror story which has been retold and produced over and over again since its original publication‚ Dracula was especially disturbing when it originally was released because of how Stoker attacks Victorian era social mores and norms throughout the entire novel. Stoker subverts traditional 19th Century social mores and norms

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    To what extent does Count Dracula fit the traditional image of vampires? It remains unknown how much exactly did Bram Stoker know about the traditional image of vampires when he was lingering in Whitby in the year 1890. It is certain‚ however‚ that it is there where an inspiration for Dracula “bit his neck” for the first time leaving a legacy of a horror-love novel capable of freezing readers’ blood until this day. Vampires‚ along with dragons‚ ghosts and other supernatural beings‚ came to existence

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    familiar" (The Balkans‚ 75).Supernatural and unexplainable events are crucial to the plot of a gothic story. Often‚ they act as the backbone of the plot and many of the circumstances and coincidences rest upon them. After reading Goldworthy’s piece and Stokers Dracula I intend to prove that the setting and the idea of a supernatural being are the most crucial parts to a gothic story. Most of the settings choose in gothic tales tended to be in the Eastern half of Europe‚ because the Eastern part of Europe

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    The novel Dracula by Bram Stoker‚1897 has been adapted into a film Bram Stoker’s Dracula‚ made in 1992. This film is an accurate and exceptionally well done adaptation of the novel. What made this adaptation so good was how it was put together; from the cast‚ to the added romance‚ to incorporating all important ideas from the novel into the film‚ without making it un-cinematic. Francis Ford Coppola (the producer of the film) chose the right cast to depict the characters just as imagined in the

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