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The Role Of Modernity In Bram Stoker's Dracula

Decent Essays

The Victorian Era was most well known for being an era of rigidity. Social expectations were strict and any action that strayed from the path of convention was quickly condemned. Dracula by Bram Stoker was published in 1897, just on the cusp of the end of the Victorian Era and the advent of the Age of Industry. Dracula was unprecedented initially because of the title character, as this was one of the first, and certainly the best known, depiction of a vampire. The book became controversial, however, through Stoker’s references to the new, upcoming age that was characterized by a growth in technology and a degeneration of morality. Stoker challenges the ideals of the Victorian Era and emphasizes modernity in Dracula by using examples of bold …show more content…

Stoker makes a point to mention a significant amount of the up and coming innovations throughout the book. At the time, journaling was the typical method of recording information, and this is referenced often as almost all of the main characters’ journals are mentioned at some point, but there are also different ways of recording such as the phonograph, typewriter, and shorthand that are referred to. All of these inventions had gained popularity within 30, some within 5, years of the publication of Dracula, so this was all very new to the public (Edison Invents). At one point, when Mina first sees Seward recording himself, she “knew at once from the description to be a phonograph. [she] had never seen one, and was much interested” (245). Mina is a fairly forward thinking woman, learning shorthand herself, so she was interested and excited by this new technology. Along with all of these new inventions, Stoker uses examples of medicinal innovations on several occasions. For example, the blood transfusions Van Helsing used to attempt to save Lucy were a very new concept. Transfusions did not become widely used until around the 1850’s, and blood types were not even taken into consideration until 1907 (Blood Transfusion). Even more innovative was Van Helsings’ use of hypnotism. Sigmund Freud, the father of psychoanalysis, didn’t publish his first major …show more content…

This was considered the first movement of feminism and suffrage in Europe. As already mentioned, women of this time period were expected to be the vision of grace and modesty. They were considered too delicate to participate in many activities or to receive frightening or stressful information. This idea is challenged repeatedly in Dracula. Besides the sexuality of the women in the story, the most shocking display that challenges gender roles was the scene when Lucy drank the child’s blood and then tossed it aside. Women were seen as incredibly maternal, and for many caring for the children was their only job, so to see such a blatant neglect of care for this child was monstrous. A less extreme example of this movement was Mina and her role in the plot. For a significant part of the second half of the book, the men wanted to keep Mina in the dark to keep from scaring her too much. However, she ended up becoming one of their strongest assets by the last few chapters. Van Helsing acknowledges Mina’s unwomanly ability to handle this information in chapter 18. He claims that she “has a man’s brain - a brain that a man should have were he much gifted” (261). She completed tasks that the men weren't able to and was able to keep up very easily. She combined all of the journals and articles and made copies of them, made up and memorized train charts, and figured out which river Dracula had most likely

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