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Sexuality In Dracula

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After decades of cheesy horror movies, the image of vampires has been misconstrued as sparkly, angsty teenage boys or handsome men that lure in girls for the fresh blood of a virgin. Many of these stereotypical vampires are influenced by the story of Dracula, held in the Victorian era. Yet, many of the stories published about vampires diverge from the message that Bram Stoker is trying to make. During the Victorian period, sexuality is repressed by society, as sexual behaviors from women are viewed as unacceptable. In the Gothic horror novel Dracula, Bram Stoker uses the traumatic experience of Jonathan Harker at Count Dracula’s castle and the invasion of vampires in Great Britain to create a social commentary on the sexual repression occurring in this era and its detrimental effect on the men.

Throughout the entire novel, Stoker hints at sexual references, based on the characters’ actions. In every encounter with female vampires, there is a perverse tone in the wordings of the passage. For example, during Jonathan Harker’s visit to Count Dracula’s castle, he encounters three vampire sisters after he disobeys Dracula’s order to not leave his room. Harker’s heart has a “wicked, burning desire” (Stoker 32) that the three sisters would kiss him. He shows carnal desires as he is approached by these vampires, unable to refuse their advances on to him, despite his loyalty to Mina. This reveals that the men of the Victorian era cannot refuse and maybe even fear the unknown sexual

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