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Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Film and Media Studies
"Betwixt Sunset And Sunrise": Liminality In Dracula, Mark M. Hennelly Jr.
"Betwixt Sunset And Sunrise": Liminality In Dracula, Mark M. Hennelly Jr.
Journal of Dracula Studies
No abstract provided.
Echoes Of Dracula: Racial Politics And The Failure Of Segregated Spaces In Richard Matheson's I Am Legend., Kathy Davis Patterson
Echoes Of Dracula: Racial Politics And The Failure Of Segregated Spaces In Richard Matheson's I Am Legend., Kathy Davis Patterson
Journal of Dracula Studies
No abstract provided.
Dracula And The Afterlife: A Psychological Explanation, Jack D. Maser
Dracula And The Afterlife: A Psychological Explanation, Jack D. Maser
Journal of Dracula Studies
Until relatively recently, the primary psychological approach to understanding Bram Stoker’s Dracula and the folklore of vampires has been psychoanalysis. Maurice Richardson asserted in 1956 that Dracula must be seen from a Freudian standpoint, since “from no other does the story really make any sense” (427). However, the psychoanalytic approach shares little with modern, scientifically based psychology. Fascinating though it may be, psychoanalytic theory has almost no measurable attributes and may itself be as mythical as vampires and an afterlife. Rather, psychoanalysis is a creative theory of human cognition and behavior that can be neither proven false, objectively replicated, nor …
The People Of Bram Stoker's Transylvania, Duncan Light
The People Of Bram Stoker's Transylvania, Duncan Light
Journal of Dracula Studies
One of the defining features of Bram Stoker’s Dracula is the “specific and detailed geographical context that sets this novel apart from other gothic novels” (Florescu & McNally 5). Indeed, although Stoker had not visited Transylvania, he is known to have read widely in preparing Dracula.1 While his historical research has come under particular scrutiny, little attention has been paid to his representation and understanding of the region’s geography.2 As a human geographer with research interests in Romania, I find that there is something not “quite right” about Stoker’s Transylvania. In particular, where are the Romanians? And why are there …