Passive Women In Dracula

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Apparently, due to the conservative perspective in the past, the ideal woman properties are nobleness, softness, purity, innocence and sometime passiveness, there are still strong and open-minded women who actively seek for happiness and love or at least have bold thought in male-female intimacy. Despite this difference, all the female characters in Frankenstein, Wuthering Heights and Dracula share something in common: they are all young pretty women with enthusiastic hearts that long for love.
In Dracula, the threat of female sexual expression is emphasized in the difference between two innocent girls, Mina and Lucy. Mina Murray is the ultimate Victorian woman with embodiment of the virtues of the age. She never have any thought of sexual impulse, therefore, her purity is retained throughout the novel. She is a dutiful wife, and her successes are always in the service of men. In many ways, Lucy is much like her dear friend Mina in her virtue and innocence. However there is an essential difference between these two girls: Lucy has quite a sexualized desire: “Why can’t they let a girl marry three men, or as many as want her, and save all this …show more content…

The first female depicted in Frankenstein, Caroline Beaufort is a self-sacrificing mother who dies taking care of her adopted daughter. The second unfortunate female character is Justine, who is executed in spite of her innocence. Similarly, Elizabeth is depicted in Victor’s adoring tone: “she appeared the most fragile creature in the world” (Shelley 65). Her role is to helplessly wait for Victor to return to her. As a character representing the passive woman model, her outcome is also a brutal death happening right in her wedding night brought by her husband’s

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