desired‚ most were predestined to become wives due to their economic reliance on men. Bram Stoker‚ either willingly or unwillingly‚ used his novel Dracula‚ to further portray the stereotype that women are inferior to men. In the novel Dracula‚ Bram Stoker conveys the stereotype that men are superior to women. In the Victorian Era‚ men believed that they were smarter and more capable of achieving more. In Dracula‚ Van Helsing was speaking to Jonathan Parker when he said "A brave man’s blood is the
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The Victorian men and women conveyed in Bram Stoker’s Dracula are pure and virtuous members of the upper and middle class. However‚ hiding behind this composed and civilized conception of England lies a dark and turbulent underbelly. This underbelly is the lumpenproletariat‚ whom Karl Marx defined as "the lowest and most degraded section of the proletariat; the down and outs’ who make no contribution to the workers cause". Victorian culture discriminated against these vagrants‚ who were seen
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Industrial revolution represented in Dracula and Frankenstein The world was going through a major change when Frankenstein and Dracula were published. The U.S and Europe were the main forces of the Industrial Revolution‚ which was basically the transition from humans completing tasks using their own hands or tools‚ to humans using machines to do those things for them‚ due to the fact that it made their lives easier. However‚ not everyone was fond of the idea of modernization. Mary Shelly feared
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Lucy Westerna and Mina Harker are the only two female characters Bram Stoker describes in detail in the novel Dracula. Lucy and Mina are two of the three characters that the reader sees becoming a vampire‚ and both characters are narrators. It is clear that these two play a very important role in the novel. Their actions have a huge effect on the way the novel unfolds. Lucy and Mina have many differences and similarities in representing the Victorian women. Lucy represents all of the evil traits
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intentions. This war entails Count Dracula‚ a blood sucking vampire who wants to infect others with his bite‚ and a group of individuals who have been affected by his evil ways. The group joins together to hunt Dracula and avenge evil acts. Dracula by Bram Stoker‚ is of a war of good versus evil in how a group of good individuals are on a mission to hunt down Dracula and put an end to his evil ways. There is one sole purpose as to why the group must hunt Dracula‚ and many instances leading up to that
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Dracula by Bram Stoker is a story about a vampire‚ Count Dracula‚ that holds Johnathan Harker captive in his castle and he eventually escapes after he has witnessed events that change him forever. Also in this story‚ Count Dracula bites two ladies Lucy and Mina. Lucy turns into a vampire after multiple encounters with Dracula and Dr. Steward‚ Dr. Van Helsing‚ Lord Godalming‚ and Quincy Morris free her from her vampire state. Then‚ Dracula forces Mina‚ who is happens to be Johnathan Harker’s wife
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Themes Salvation and Damnation As several characters note in the novel‚ a person’s physical life is of secondary importance to the person’s eternal life‚ which can be jeopardized if the person is made evil by a vampire like Dracula. Professor Van Helsing says‚ when he is explaining why they must kill the vampire Lucy‚ "But of the most blessed of all‚ when this now Un-Dead be made to rest as true dead‚ then the soul of the poor lady whom we love shall again be free." Even characters that are of
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review on Bram Stoker’s “Dracula” The assembly of miscellaneous excerpts and diary entries revealed the narrative of the attorney’s journey to the isolated castle of the Romanian nobleman in the Eastern European country of Transylvania. The conclusion of property transaction that Harker was supposed to be negotiating with Count Dracula‚ was quickly forgotten once the count had taken his lawyer prisoner. Picturesque views of the Carpathians‚ flamboyant indigenous people‚ erudite and affable Dracula were
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Bram Stoker used his characters in Dracula to help portray the death of the Victorian Woman and the birth of the New Woman. During this time‚ women didn’t have the equal rights that men did. During the 19th century‚ women weren’t able to vote and usually stayed home to be housewives. This shows that women were accustomed to the conventional Victorian lifestyle‚ which meant that they rarely did anything outside of the house. Victorian woman didn’t play a big role in society‚ and were known as the
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mystique‚ London is the perfect location for Bram Stoker’s Dracula. London: The capital of Great Britain‚ and the center of attention in the nineteenth century‚ due to the many incidents that were going on at the time. The novel includes many daunting scenes‚ such as when Dracula heaves a sack withholding a deceased child before three female vampires. It is no surprise why he choose London to be the setting of his novel. London is "exotic" and unknown. Stoker is obviously inspired by London’s castles
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