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Sexuality In Bram Stoker's Dracula

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Why not Overtly? “The real ornament of a woman is her character, her purity” (Ghandi). The Victorian society era was an era that prolonged from 1837-1901. The era inhabited queen Victoria of England when she reigned as a monarch of Great Britain. The Victorian epoch abided to be an epoch of virtue and purity. Women in Victorianism were not permitted to be seen with a man publicly and never the less be authorized to have sexual intercourse if not married. This era of constraints for the British had one goal and that goal was to cover women up and sex was only accredited when conceiving children. Society in the outside viewed a perfect female structure but if examined cautiously society converted sex and symbols in books. Soon the society …show more content…

In Bram’s Stoker’s Dracula, the author covertly shares elements of female sexuality such as sex and lust because he is forced to follow the laws of the Victorian era. Sexuality is a word that is defined as the capacity of sexual feelings. In numerous books and movies sexuality is shared covertly. In Dracula the sexuality promoted in the book is shared covertly. In Dracula, Bram Stoker explains “When the blood began to spurt out, he … seized my neck and pressed my mouth to the wound, so that, I must either suffocate or swallow some of the-oh my God! (Stoker 40). This quote conveys an expression of a frankly innocent quote of Dracula at first sight, but if analyzed it exemplifies that a basic blood sucking act can be an act of sucking a female's purity. This …show more content…

This citation to a throngs of readers is apt as the scene when Arthur is killing Dracula with a stake at heart but if studied the conclusion outcome is that Stoker was no man of clean mind and the “stake” is not a stake to kill Dracula but a stake for sexual actions to Mina. Sexual tension is inscribed all across this book. It would not take Albert Einstein to comprehend the importance of sex to this book, but perhaps society is asking the wrong questions. What if the goal is not to find where the evidence is located but perhaps in the why? Could the why be because of patriarchy, the Victorian era itself, or is it something darker and deeper. In Dracula patriarchy is a role not only to make it more controlling and sexual but to degrade women. When patriarchy is inherited in the household it is when a man possess power over the women and children. In Bram’s Stoker’s Dracula patriarchy is cited “At least God’s mercy is better than that of these monsters, and the precipice is steep and high. At its foot a man may sleep-as a man” (50). This cite explains how van Healsing feels about the three voluptuous women. For Van

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