Abstract

Vampires and other blood-sucking monstrous beings constitute some of the most famous myths, legends and stories that continue to haunt contemporary societies. This special issue examines the presence of these beings within cities and their rural surrounds. The contributions to this special issue reflect upon vampires and other monstrosities in relation to the tropical regions of the world from historical pasts to present-day manifestations, and imaginary tropical futures, including: the British colonial empire in the tropical east, New Orleans in the deep south of the United States, across the border to Mexico and Latin American communities, over to India and Southeast Asia, including Bangkok in Thailand, Singapore, and Sabah on the island of Borneo, and to the tropical east coast of Australia. However, the concept of the tropics is not simply a geographical construct, the imaginary of the tropics also emerges out of the spaces of mythology and oral storytelling, ethnographic reports, literature, science fiction magazines, film and television, video games and the internet.

Highlights

  • Vampires and other blood-sucking monstrous beings constitute some of the most famous myths, legends and stories that continue to haunt contemporary societies

  • In the first paper of this special issue, Stu Burns analyzes this fear of the ‘other’ through an in-depth exploration of vampires and empire. He provides a background to the myths and folklore associated with Eastern European vampires and the concomitant concerns over movements of people through migration and how these are reflected in Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1897)

  • He theorises Dracula through Orientalist and imperialist discourses, which he relates to examples from Africa and South Asia

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Summary

Introduction

Vampires and other blood-sucking monstrous beings constitute some of the most famous myths, legends and stories that continue to haunt contemporary societies. The liminal qualities of monstrous beings such as vampires, ghosts, spirits, were-tigers, shape-shifters, mythical animals, liminal criminals, and the wild feminine.

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