Abstract

Bram Stoker’s Gothic novel, Dracula can be seen as a political text which comments on the social and political reality of Victorian England. The novel relies on the aesthetics of transgression both in its structure, which is epistolary and provides for multiple points of view, and in its contents, which describes the appearance of a supernatural being – the vampire. Supernatural events and characters symbolize the fear of moral decline that may occur as a consequence of contact between the dominant Victorian culture and colonial cultures, enabled by Britain’s colonial endeavours. The character of Dracula functions in most cases as a part of the subtext, a danger one does not see, but feels. He is a symbol of the fear of potential reversed colonialization and of the dangers of female emancipation, both of which represent a threat to the anglo-centric patriarchal hierarchy. As such, Dracula (and the contact with the East that he represents) symbolizes a threat to the tradition and stability of the British Empire which finds itself in a schizophrenic situation: on the one hand, Britain desires the new, as is seen through the scientific and technological progress, as well as progressive cultural phenomena, such as the idea of female equality. On the other hand, the promising future is burdened by an uncertainty that scares the British as it represents a step away from the position of a symbolic center of imperial power and away from patriarchy. Stoker’s novel is thus revealed as one of key texts which, paradoxically, represents Victorian ideology through the representation of ultimate otherness in the form of a monster.

Highlights

  • Baš kao što vampir prisiljava Minu Harker da popije njegovu krv (Stoker 1999: 252) kako bi je pridobio za sebe i na taj način mogao kontrolirati, tako i lovci, pod vodstvom Van Helsinga, prisilno obavljaju transfuzije krvi ne bi li primirili novoprobuđene životinjske strasti Lucy Westenra (Stoker 1999: 110‒113) i na taj ju način vratili pod okrilje viktorijanske ideologije, odnosno u okvire prihvatljivog načina ponašanja utemeljenog na patrijarhalnoj strukturi i vrijednostima društva

  • Za razliku od Lucy, Mina preživljava kontakt s vampirom, jer ne teži radikalnoj emancipaciji, što u patrijarhalnom kontekstu prije svega označava seksualnu emancipaciju i kontrolu nad vlastitim tijelom, te ne podliježe koruptivnom utjecaju orijentalnog drugog

  • Cerebral Automatism, the Brain, and the Soul in Bram Stoker’s Dracula

Read more

Summary

Proizvodnja drugoga

Pripovjedna struktura Stokerova epistolarnog romana fragmentirana je i sastoji se od zapisa nekoliko pripovjedača, čime se postiže napetost i neizvjesnost. Odjekujući idejama koje proizlaze iz Lacanova koncepta zrcalne faze prema kojemu se pojedinac identificira s vlastitim odrazom u zrcalu i na taj način spoznaje sebe kao drugog, Drakula prikazuje kolonizatorsku, imperijalnu silu koja se ogleda u zrcalu, ali se ne prepoznaje, nego pripisuje svoje imperijalne žudnje drugome (koji je zapravo ja/ego). Baš kao što vampir prisiljava Minu Harker da popije njegovu krv (Stoker 1999: 252) kako bi je pridobio za sebe i na taj način mogao kontrolirati, tako i lovci, pod vodstvom Van Helsinga, prisilno obavljaju transfuzije krvi ne bi li primirili novoprobuđene životinjske strasti Lucy Westenra (Stoker 1999: 110‒113) i na taj ju način vratili pod okrilje viktorijanske ideologije, odnosno u okvire prihvatljivog načina ponašanja utemeljenog na patrijarhalnoj strukturi i vrijednostima društva. Istočnjačka različitost nije prikazana samo u smislu kulturne heterogenosti koja se ogleda drugačijom nošnjom (odjećom) ili običajima, već ih se i ideološki eksplicitno instrumentalizira i u smislu moralne drugosti uslijed koje istočne narode treba percipirati kao razbojnike (bandu). Zli drugi nužan je kako bi se viktorijanska norma mogla proglasiti dobrom i društveno prihvatljivom: što je negativna strana drugosti više naglašena, to se imperijalna kultura čini boljom

Seksualiziranje drugoga
Mina Harker
Zaključak
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call