Review: Dracula by Bram Stoker
I think my teacher characterized this book perfectly in class. Before he started discussion about the book he said, instead of a book jacket, Dracula needs a straitjacket. I have to admit that after struggling through over four hundred pages of Stoker’s land of lunacy, I fully agree with his assessment.
I have to admit, when I heard that we would be reading Dracula in my Victorian Literature class I was incredibly excited. The class had been divided into two major sections of Gothic literature: ghost stories and vampire stories. I always associated Dracula as one of the major pieces of literature that created the modern vampire that has inspired so many modern day marvels like Twilight and The Vampire Diaries. However, the class had introduced me to many of the stories that inspired Stoker’s creation of Count Dracula like Le Fanu’s Carmilla, which oddly enough tells the tale of a strange lesbian vampire relationship – you have to read it to believe it.
Strangely enough, Dracula isn’t really all that much about vampires. Even though he is the title character, Dracula is not the main character. The story doesn’t really revolve around him. In fact, it is questionable whether there is a main character in the story. Told in fragments through a nonlinear narrative of numerous characters, it can be difficult to figure out exactly what Dracula is about. At first we meet, Jonathan Harker, who in the end is responsible for bringing Dracula to London which is where the “horror” begins as Dracula begins to prey on the local girls.
So what it really boils down to is that Stoker is writing a very strange misogynistic manifesto. Dracula is not a threat to Harker and his friends because he is a vampire per se but because he is a foreigner (from Eastern European Transylvania) who comes into the heart of England, London, to taint the women there. Lucy, his first victim, becomes the fallen angel. So all the men get together to protect Harker’s wife, Mina, who is the model of the Angel in the house (what every woman obviously is meant to be).
I find it extremely unfortunate that this book has had such a lasting effect on our society. In my opinion, Stoker takes the rich history of the vampire legend and destroys it by using it to reinforce stereotypes about women and foreigners. Instead of opening people’s eyes and challenging their opinions about subjects that concerned them, Stoker is only preaching a very tired message about the dreaded “other.”






Thanks for your great review. I’ve always avoided this book because I thought it would be scary – now I know to skip it for other reasons.
I’m disappointed to hear this about Stoker’s book. I’m glad you warned me away from it!
I struggled so much with this book I finally put it down and never finished.
Jeane,
This book really is a huge struggle – it’s so LONG and painful!
I came by first to thank you for stopping by my blog the other day. Also, love the new design (it has been a while). Very interesting review of this book I’ve never been sure I wanted to read. You’re the first person to suggest that Stoker was misogynistic and xenophobic. I won’t feel so guilty if I never get to it…
Thanks for stopping by! It has been a while. I doubt I’m the first – and I’m not entirely sure I would have picked up on it so strongly without the help of my class. I think I would have been annoyed with the female characters for being so weak, but I don’t think I would have tied it into the major themes of the book. I think without my class guiding me through this book I would have had absolutely no clue what it really was about.
I have never read Dracula and was always sure I didn’t want to, because I thought it’d be too scary.
Your review warns me from picking up the book in another manner, although I think your analysis that it is misogonistic and xenophobic is very interesting. That interesting that it might almost make me pick up the book.
Iris, It’s definitely not scary so don’t worry about that. I’m pretty easily scared and the movie versions of Dracula are much scarier than the actual book itself.
‘instead of a book jacket, Dracula needs a straitjacket.’ I just love this line, it really made me laugh. I still have Dracula on my list of books to read.
Thanks for stopping by my blog, I love to meet other book bloggers and see what they are reading.
Thanks for stopping by my blog. I’m relatively new to blogging and I seem to come in and out of the blogosphere. But I’m committing myself to becoming a more serious blogger this year. So I’ve been relentlessly trying to discover new blogs – that’s how I came across yours. I’m glad that you loved the line – I loved it too. My teacher is so witty.
I have yet to make it through Dracula. The beginning always bores me, but I haven’t heard a take on it quite like this. I find ot so intriguing. I want to read it now to see if I agree. Thanks for the review.
I didn’t think about the sexism when I read this book. What I saw was Stoker eliciting fear by showing a villian that could destroy what was pure, innocent, and pious. Before him, few authors had such “perfect” victims. They all had some character flaw that led to their demise. But Stoker took the essence of goodness, characterized it, and then made it fall to a supernatural being beyond human control. At the time it was published, this horrified people. Obviously today this is not so much the case (and I found the way Dracula died to be very anticlimactic) but it is what it is. Thanks for the review!
Thanks for your input. I can definitely see where you’re coming from!
I must admit, I really really enjoyed Dracula. The book, although sexist and slightly anti-climactic, had some wonderful descriptive passages that I see as some of the best in literary history. Such as the scene where Jonathon encounters the three brides in the study. That section was magnificent. Don’t be warned off the book, just be well informed before you read it
Loved the review though, you are a talented writer.