Throughout life parents have told their children stories sometimes for them to go to sleep and sometimes just to scare them. Some parents have told their kids legends and folklores so vividly that the kids started to believe the stories, and later thing they are true. One of the most famous folklores that had gotten more attention in recent years are vampires. Vampires have changed from scary monster to attractive dead people because of how the media portrays them now a day. Some people are fascinated by this monster so much that some have created cults saying they are vampires too. The thing people have to understand is that vampires have never existed and were just created to explain the unexplainable.
According to the Oxford English
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Vampires were created because they couldn’t explain the unexplainable and decided to make up something to feed their ego. Vampires were the answer to everything from nightmares, diseases, and deaths. When science started explaining what caused deaths in the nineteenth century people started using vampires as freaky monsters for horror stories. By the turn of the century two versions of the same creature were created the first one was the original the scary one and the modern day one being attractive. Throughout many centuries there have been many origins on how the vampire was created. One of the most famous origins can be found on the book Paul Barber wrote a book called “Vampires, Burial and Death: Folklore and Reality” in the earlier day people did not know much about the body after the person died. People believed that after someone had passed away the body would reanimate and slowly turn into a vampire. Most people did not know the process of decomposing until a while ago. After someone dies, the body’s skin and gums lose fluids and this exposes the roots of the hair, nails, and teeth, and even the teeth that was concealed in the jaw. This makes the body look as if the body’s hair nails, and teeth have grown. Following the process of decomposition goes on, the nails fall off and the skin peels away, making it look like "new skin" and "new nails". The belief in vampires resulted from people of
Vampires have been around for centuries, they represent the fear of many things such as sexuality, race, gender, etc. and above all, they stand for the fear of diseases. Vampires have once been the symbol of horror due to their terrific depictions and were described as a threat to the humanity. Throughout time, the image of vampire has changed dramatically from a monstrous, inhumanely creature that doesn’t belong to human society to such an attractive and adaptive figure that expresses more of the human side than the evil. They developed human feelings, senses, and live within our society. Modern vampire movies are often more romantic and “sympathetic” comparing to the past. Vampires have abandoned their horror and evolved to a more
Physically, vampires have changed their appearance over the last century from the dark and non-human approach to a more modern and humanistic look. Earlier authors focused on gothic themed vampire narratives giving them
Vampires in the past are known as an undead and a scary monster. They are called scary monster for a number of reasons. Vampires are depicted as human corpses that revive their lives from the graves, harm living people, and seduce women. They are bloodthirsty, animated monsters that created in the folklore. According to the article “Vampire Gentlemen and Zombie Beasts” Angela Tenga and Elizabeth Zimmerman demonstrate that, “Today’s vampire is ‘a lonely immortal longing for love, family, and approval” (76). To be more specific, this monster was first created as vampire with the horror look that comes back from death, he harms human by biting and draining blood. Vampires often target lust in women's sexuality. He represents fears and desires that humans are so hesitating to approach but also attracting to vampires. Over time, vampires have evolved differently and tremendously from the day that they were born till today.
Representations of the vampire archetype have changed over time. This is because people have different context of vampires due to different eras. The Bram Stoker’s original vampire text “Dracula” is about two men going on a business trip to meet Dracula. He was very welcoming but after a day the two man saw Dracula for who he was really was a vampire. It reflects the context of 1897 by the humans saw the vampire as a demon from the devil. The humans saw the Vampire was a demon because they were evil. In 2008 Catherine Hardwick released “Twilight”. This film is about a family of vampire called the Cullen’s trying to live a normal human live. The Cullen's didn’t feed from humans blood they feeded of animal blood The kids go to a school in a small town called Forks, Washington. The similarities between the archetypes in both text are that the vampire in Twilight and Dracula feeded on blood, don’t go in the sun and wear clothes what are hide most of their body’s. However, the main difference are, In the Cullen's talk to human and live close to him, go to school to with them, whereas Dracula doesn't.
The vampire is not by any means a new manifestation of the fears of a society. Their presence in human culture can be traced back for centuries in human folklore. The first Anglicized representations of the creature in literature date back to the English poetry of the early 1700s, and were then followed in the fiction genre by such works as John William Polidori’s The Vampyre, Sheridan Le Fanu’s Carmilla, and of course, Bram Stoker’s Dracula. For the audiences of the 18th century, vampires embodied many of the following common fears shared between the people: of illness, both mental and epidemic, of an embraced sexuality, particularly that of women’s and homosexuals’, and of foreigners. As the archetypical vampire evolved throughout the
Does Dracula, Queen of the Damned, or Anne Rice sound familiar? Surely, they must, but not just for one person. In fact, for people all over the world! The three terms expressed all have one thing in common; vampires. These mythical creatures are one of the most popular horror-related figures. Vampires may be a frightening subject for most, but that does not take away from the fact of their popularity throughout. The fascination of vampires has greatly affected past, present, and future cultures all around the world.
The generalization for vampires has been displayed in films and literature for hundreds of years. The stereotypical versions of vampires are that they have long fangs, sleep in coffins during the day, and suck the blood out of humans. Both novels contradict those stereotypes in different ways. To understand the diversity of the vampires described in both novels, one must examine the characteristics that the vampires display and the meaning and purpose behind them. David D. Gilmore’s book “Monsters” analyzes monsters and other mythical creatures. Gilmore describes why humanity invented the idea of
Dracula and vampires continue to captivate us because of their odd nature and strange relationship with human beings. This makes us wonder how humanity would survive if vampires were actually real. It also captivates us because they live very different lives than us which captivates us to learn more about them and how they adapt to their lives with humans.
Vampires are one of the most oldest and most prevalent creatures known to world mythology. The beginning of vampires has remained unknown for thousands of years, but according to legend it all began in the Mediterranean sea.Only vampires can create another vampire but nobody knows the total insight into how the first vampire was made until recent history.
The glorification of vampires has changed the original view of the monster. Monsters in classic literature were in-human, scary-looking creatures that were inherently evil for varying reasons. Vampires were something to be afraid of, and something that no one would want to find on a dark, cold night. However, in popular culture, vampires have changed dramatically. Because of Hollywood, vampires are revered as the epitome of sexy.
The vampire of today is most commonly associated with the type that was created by Bram Stoker when Dracula was published in 1897 (Florescu and McNally 221). This popular cultural icon is described by Stoker in his novel: "The teeth were strong and white, and the canine teeth protruded over the lower lip when the mouth was closed. The [vampire's] hands were large and powerful, the nails black and pointed like a bird's talons" (qtd. in Florescu and McNally 227).
Vampires weren’t always the socially in-tune creatures that they are now. The whole legend started from Bram stoker’s “Dracula”. Stoker had created a fictional character based on Vlad the Impaler or Vlad III. Who for several reasons was a perfect person to pick he was feared by many, was ruthless, killed his own, and got rid of all the sick and poor… burning them alive. ELI NIXON stated that “Historians put the deaths at the hands of Dracula at somewhere between 40,000 and 100,000”. And finally Vlad may not have sucked blood out of his victims ' necks, but he would invite his victims for a feast and immediately after. They would be impaled at the dinner table. Vlad calmly finishing his meal while dipping his bread in buckets of blood drained from the people he killed. For these and many other reasons Vlad inspired Stoker to create Dracula. A soulless monster who possesses an evil soul and feeds on blood. Most recently the popular “Twilight Saga” by Stephenie Meyer, has changed how vampires are viewed drastically. Instead of being horrific monsters there were turned into a teenage girl’s twisted fantasy. In Meyer’s book the vampires sparkle under direct sunlight. They ****ing sparkle. For what reasons did these changes occur?
If you were to ask people 10 years ago what came to mind when they thought about vampires, you would probably get answers that described frightening creatures that lurk in the night in search of human blood. These perceptions are usually brought on from one of the most famous vampire stories ever written; Dracula. Bram Stoker’s Dracula tells the story of Count Dracula and his bloodthirsty journey from his castle in Transylvania to the shores of London. Where he searches for blood from both men and women, while his enemies seek to destroy him and rid the world of his evil. In more recent years the tables have turned due to the widespread popularity of the Twilight series novels as well as the film adaptions. The Twilight series originally written by Stephanie Meyer, recounts the love story of Isabella Swan a human teenager who risks it all when she falls for Edward Cullen a vampire forever frozen at the age of 17. Due to its popularity, lots of people visualize the main vampire in the series, Edward Cullen, when they think of the undead. With his devilishly handsome features, bad boy allure, and ability to make all the girls of Forks high school swoon, Edward Cullen and his family of “vegetarian vampires” are redefining the modern view of vampires.
“The idea of an undead night-stalker that feeds on human blood has been around for centuries and endures to this day. Numerous countries and cultures across the globe have personal deviations of a similar folkloric entity. No matter the variation, all vampire tales have a key commonality—the lust for human blood. It was not until the late 19th century that an Irish author compiled a breadth of knowledge on such folkloric tales and concocted the character that now acts as the template for the vampire myth. Bram Stoker’s Dracula was first published in 1897 and from that point forward the novelist’s title character set the precedent for all fictional vampires.” -The Evolution of the Vampire in Fiction and Popular Culture
Vampires, or also called masters of darkness, are beings created from the same blood of Lucifer, beings that live from the blood itself and exist only to destroy life and everything that exists. These beings have a superhuman force, which far surpasses that of a human. These monsters are very recognizable, since they are beings with very pale skin, dark eyes and fangs used to suck people's blood. Although these monsters can fly, they have strength over human and can be transformed; Are very susceptible to the light of the sun, since these are burned with only to the time, also they are super susceptible to the garlic and everything that has to do with the