Essay On Xenophobia In Dracula

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In 1897, an Irish author by the name of Abraham ‘Bram’ Stoker introduced the character of the vampire, Count Dracula, to readers of the time. As written and published in the Victorian era, referring to the time during which England fell under the 63 year reign of Queen Victoria, Dracula reflects the attitudes and beliefs of individuals during this period. It was marked by a great expansion of the British Empire, and was an age rich in industrial, political, scientific, cultural, and military change within the United Kingdom. An abundance of these themes and values are portrayed through the several protagonists in the text in its epistolary format. The most prominent of which are inclusive of, but not limited to xenophobia, the new woman and sexuality, the dichotomy of religion and supernaturalism, and the coalescence of science, industrialism and modernity.
By definition, xenophobia is the unreasonable fear or hatred of the unfamiliar, more specifically, foreigners. Xenophobia and fervent nationalism were principal qualities of the society of Victorian England. With the extent of the British Empire encompassing several ethnicities, cultures, and races, a general xenophobia and fear of miscegenation surfaced. It was thought that racial degeneration and human devolution would result from the intermixing of blood with foreigners and the dilution of British blood. Thus, most outsiders bore the brunt of the anxieties of the middle class in the form of discrimination and oppression. It was in this environment of anxiety that Stoker penned Dracula.
Stoker, in Dracula, portrays contrasting representations of foreigners and how others regard them. In the case of Van Helsing, while still a foreigner, he is depicted as being morally righte...

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...y to those who read the story during this time. Stoker uses hybridity between modernity and folklore to hone in on the fears of the novel's earliest readers concerning modern technologies. By demonstrating that the characters hunting Dracula must rely on both modernity and folklore to successfully defeat him, Stoker elucidates the hesitation to engage in the use of modern technologies.
Bram Stoker captures the essence of Victorian England through his portrayal of every main character. Each reflects a value of the time thus, allowing for readers of all ages to engage with this timeless literary piece. Stoker cleverly and effectively provides insight into the context, to appeal to the pathological, ethical and logical senses of the reader. He inadvertently cemented the concept of the vampire into popular culture and set precedent for multiple vampiric tales to come.

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