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Vampire versus the empire: Bram Stoker's reproach of fin-de-siecle Britain in dracula

dc.contributor.author Koç, Ertuğrul
dc.contributor.author Demir, Yağmur
dc.contributor.authorID 6497 tr_TR
dc.contributor.authorID 30410 tr_TR
dc.contributor.other İngilizce Mütercimlik ve Tercümanlık
dc.contributor.other İngiliz Dili ve Edebiyatı
dc.date.accessioned 2018-10-04T08:34:36Z
dc.date.available 2018-10-04T08:34:36Z
dc.date.issued 2018
dc.department Çankaya Üniversitesi, Fen Edebiyat Fakültesi, İngiliz Dili ve Edebiyatı Bölümü en_US
dc.description.abstract Much has been said about Bram Stoker's Dracula (1897), the out-of-tradition exemplar of the Gothic which, perhaps, has had a more pervasive effect on our understanding of life and death, gender roles and identity, and sex and perversity than any other work of the genre. The vampire from the so-called dark ages has become a symbol standing for the uncontrollable powers acting on us and also for all the discarded, uncanny phenomena in human nature and history. The work, however, has usually been taken by the critics of Gothic literature as “a paradigmatic Gothic text” (Brewster 488) representing the social, psychological, and sexual traumas of the late-nineteenth century. Hence, it has been analysed as a work “breaking [the] taboos, [and in need of being] read as an expression of specifically late Victorian concerns” (Punter and Byron 231). The text has also been seen as “reinforc[ing] readers’ suspicions that the authorities (including people, institutions and disciplines) they trust are ineffectual” (Senf 76). Yet, it has hardly ever been taken as offering an alternative Weltanschauung in place of the decaying Victorian ethos. True, Dracula is a fin-de-siècle novel and deals with the turbulent paradigmatic shift from the Victorian to the modern, and Stoker, by creating the lecherous vampire and his band as the doppelgängers of the sexually sterile and morally pretentious bourgeois types (who are, in fact, inclined to lascivious joys), reveals the moral hypocrisy and sexual duplicity of his time. But, it is also true that by juxtaposing the “abnormal” against the “normal” he targets the utilitarian bourgeois ethics of the empire: aware of the Victorian pragmatism on which the concept of the “normal” has been erected, he, with an “abnormal” historical figure (Vlad Drăculea of the House of Drăculești, 1431–76) who appears as Count Dracula in the work, attacks the ethical superstructure of Britain which has already imposed on the Victorians the “pathology of normalcy” (Fromm 356). Hence, Stoker's choice of title character, the sadistic Vlad the Impaler, who fought against the Ottoman Empire in the closing years of the Middle Ages, and his anachronistic rendering of Dracula as a Gothic invader of the Early Middle Ages are not coincidental (Figure 8). In the world of the novel, this embodiment of the early and late paradigms is the antagonistic power arrayed against the supposedly stable, but in reality fluctuating, fin-de-siècle ethos. However, by turning this personification of the “evil” past into a sexual enigma for the band of men who are trying to preserve the Victorian patriarchal hegemony, Stoker suggests that if Victorian sterile faith in the “normal” is defeated through a historically extrinsic (in fact, currently intrinsic) anomaly, a more comprehensive social and ethical epoch that has made peace with the past can be started. en_US
dc.description.publishedMonth 6
dc.identifier.citation Koç, E., Demir, Y. (2018). Vampire versus the empire: Bram Stoker's reproach of fin-de-siecle Britain in dracula. Victorian Literature And Culture, 46(2), 425-442. http://dx.doi.org/ 10.1017/S1060150317000481 en_US
dc.identifier.doi 10.1017/S1060150317000481
dc.identifier.endpage 442 en_US
dc.identifier.issn 1060-1503
dc.identifier.issue 2 en_US
dc.identifier.startpage 425 en_US
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12416/1810
dc.identifier.volume 46 en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Cambridge Univ. Press. en_US
dc.relation.ispartof Victorian Literature And Culture en_US
dc.rights info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess en_US
dc.title Vampire versus the empire: Bram Stoker's reproach of fin-de-siecle Britain in dracula tr_TR
dc.title Vampire Versus the Empire: Bram Stoker's Reproach of Fin-De Britain in Dracula en_US
dc.type Article en_US
dspace.entity.type Publication
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relation.isAuthorOfPublication a553b6ca-4dc5-4a8d-841a-8a66d0b96b94
relation.isAuthorOfPublication.latestForDiscovery 76757f1e-4c2a-4ee5-a50c-cde6f3b218e8
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