Is Mina Murray an ideal example of a Victorian woman and New woman? Sure‚ she is. Mina has all the qualities that a Victorian woman should have. There are certain characteristics a woman must have in order to me an ideal Victorian woman. “ The dear girl was more affectionate with me than ever‚ and clung to me as thought she would detain me” (Stoker‚ 248). Mina loved Jonathan like a loyal woman. She wanted to spend all her time with him‚ which tells us how loyal she is. For a woman it was very important
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Programme Dracula Bram Stoker for help. Lucy dies and is buried. A number of children are then found with marks on their necks and Van Helsing knows that Lucy has come back to life as a vampire. He and his companions go to the coffin and push a wooden stake into her heart and cut off her head. Van Helsing sets out a plan to kill Dracula. The men first go to Carfax House‚ where Dracula is thought to be hiding‚ but they find nothing except old boxes full of earth. Then‚ they witness Mina drinking
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In Dracula‚ the normal gender roles are reversed‚ and the traditional Victorian readers are treated with an epic novel that does give the women the power over men. Gender and sexuality have been changing gradually‚ and its role in the society has equally been changing. In a succinct way‚ the change in the gender roles combined with the use of gothic descriptions gives this novel a very powerful impact on various aspects in the society. Gender provides a crucial role in this book with Count Dracula
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Bram Stoker’s now legendary novel‚ Dracula‚ is not just any piece of cult-spawning fiction‚ but rather a time capsule containing the popular thoughts‚ ideas‚ and beliefs of the Victorian era that paints an elaborate picture of what society was like for Bram Stoker’s generation. The Victorian era was a very strange time. This time period was known for Poorhouses (Asylum) were government run facilities where the poor‚ infirm‚ or mentally ill could live. They were usually filthy and full to the brim
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The Mixed-Up Gender Roles in Dracula In the Victorian Era gender roles were very clear-cut and were not to be ignored. Men were masculine‚ tough‚ and considered protectors. Women were meant to be pure‚ kind‚ matronly‚ and frail. These were the stereotypical social behaviors of the genders and they were very strongly enforced. Women wouldn’t find a husband if they began to act at all masculine and subsequently‚ men would never find a wife if they began to act feminine or do “girly” things. The
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inquisition‚ the Crusades‚ and the most severe and devastating of them all‚ the Holocaust. Even though during the Victorian age‚ the Jews were not actively persecuted‚ antisemitism can still be seen in the works of literature‚ like Bram Stoker’s Dracula. Dracula stereotypical Jewish appearance is meant to symbolize the Victorian distrust
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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
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Dracula‚ a vampire that serves as an anti-Christ‚ is a human embodiment that the Victorians fear and hope to destroy. Stoker describes him as a prominent figure of grieving evil‚ a curse that is a disgrace to the Victorian society. Having seen Count Dracula being ostracized from deviating from Christianity and creating his own religion‚ Stoker intends to persuade readers that believing in such religion is required and essential to human survival. One tradition of Christianity that Dracula greatly
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Dracula and the New Woman Stoker emphasises the threat of the ‘New Woman’ through constant mentioning of their dress and appearance; he does this to emphasis the contrast between the ‘New Woman’ and the traditional women. In the chapter where Jonathan is approached by the 3 woman vampires‚ who represent the dreaded ‘New Woman’ the language used to describe the women is very critical. He refers to them as “ladies by their dress and manner” stating them to be effeminate and vulgar and this makes it
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Gender Roles in Dracula In a time period where females had narrow gender roles‚ Bram Stoker wrote his novel‚ Dracula. The Victorian culture often suppressed women and their value. Traditional Victorian women were thought of to be pure and virginal. Bram Stoker revealed another side of women that was not often seen. These qualities were like that of the emerging new feministic culture called the “New Woman”. The concept of gender roles in the 1890’s was very conflicted; Dracula challenged traditional
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