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Vampire, Dracula and Victorian Morality Theories
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2 Sociology Mind Map on Vampire, Dracula and Victorian Morality Theories, created by Anna-Maria Kotulski on 30/12/2015.
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sociology
vampire
dracula
morality
victorian
sociology
2
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Anna-Maria Kotulski
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Anna-Maria Kotulski
almost 9 years ago
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Resource summary
Vampire, Dracula and Victorian Morality Theories
Mary Douglas (1966)
Purity and Danger (1966)
Social order and heirarchy is symbolised through the sexual body
Prejudice towards other cultures (Eastern Europen in Dracula case) views on sex causes this fear and taboo
She exmined different tribal culture in comparison to westernised beliefs about sex
Michael Foucault (1976)
A History of Sexuality Vol 1 (1976)
We as a society are obsessed with sex
This obsession creates discourse on the conduct of sex and creates tabboo which folk devils cross
This discourse on sex intensified in the 18th century
Anne Rice (1976)
An Interview with a Vampire (1976)
Vampires are represented as beautiful and immoral, not obeying rules and domination
Doesn't break the trditional sense in that sunrise is their only curfew
They only reveal their ugly side in death
Blood and vampire infection were metaphor for AIDS at the time
Stephanie Meyer (2005)
Twilight (2005)
Vampires counteract the anxieties of the family and American value, they are moral, believe in love, no sex before marriage ect.
They eat animals rather than feast on humans
Fairytale living happily ever after with your middle class vampire family
Margaret L. Carter (1997)
The Vampire as Alien in Contemporary Fiction (1997)
The notion of the outsider in Dracula horrified Victorians, but is perceived as attractive today
Rosemary Jackson (1981)
Fantasy: The Literature of Subversion (1981)
Stoker reinforces social class, racial and sexual prejudices
Society can only remain in tact by excluding that 'other' alien
Housel and Wisnewski (2009)
Twilight and Philosophy (2009)
Food is used as a metaphor for love ans desire as it is likened to hunger
The vampire no longer requires blood but love
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