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Sexuality In Dracula

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The Victorian era held a strict standard toward the women, especially regarding their responsibilities as home-makers and their expression of sexuality. At the time, woman was considered inferior to her male counterpart in families and her main responsibilities included obeying her husband and bearing and caring for their children. The Victorian society, in general, saw lust and sex as taboo subjects in public. This view was held even stricter against women of the time and society viewed women as not having sexual desires in total; their only desires should be those of their husband’s. (Podonsky) Many novels touched upon this topic of female sexuality in the era, including the infamous Dracula first published in 1897. Dracula is an epistolary novel written by Bram Stoker accounting the move of Count Dracula, the main antagonist, from Transylvania to England to obtain feeding resources and the protagonists’ journey to destroy him. Through vampirism, Bram Stoker expresses in Dracula the discontent of both men and women regarding the constrained female sexuality during the Victorian era by using sexualized female characters and recording male character’s reaction to them.
To begin with, Lucy is one of the characters that Stoker uses to show the repressed female sexuality during the Victorian era. At the start of the story, Stoker portrays Lucy as a sweet, innocent, upper-class girl, the representation of how society expected women to behave. Many people fall for Lucy’s charm,

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