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Dracula Part 4: Gothic Literature 2119 Views


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Description:

Dracula, Dorian Gray, and Bertha Mason are the cool kids on the block when it comes to Gothic literature. We’re in full favor of them starting a pop group, but we have a feeling Bertha would pull a Beyoncé and leave Gothic Kids on the Block high and dry.


Transcript

00:01

We speak student!

00:07

Dracula

00:08

Gothic Literature

00:11

a la Shmoop

00:13

We're gonna dive into some of the primary characteristics

00:16

that separate Dracula from

00:19

other characters of the era, other Gothic characters.

00:23

So, can you frame for us just

00:25

two or three or four other Gothic characters

00:27

that might have existed contemporaneously in this era?

00:32

So a good counterpoint to Dracula would be

00:35

Dorian Gray in Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray,

00:39

who's also an aristocrat,

00:40

but is not a vampire.

00:42

[ hiss ]

00:43

He makes this bargain to stay young.

00:46

He's a young, pretty lad.

00:49

[ aww ]

00:51

Someone draws a picture of him, paints a picture of him.

00:53

He bemoans the fact that the picture

00:55

will not age and he will.

00:57

In this moment, he makes

00:59

- Faustian... - He makes a Faustian bargain.

01:02

No, he doesn't know. So Faustian.

01:05

And he stays young forever.

01:06

[ baby crying ]

01:08

He's also -- So, Picture of Dorian Gray

01:11

is a Gothic novella.

01:14

He's a Gothic character.

01:16

[ gasp ]

01:16

He's not a vampire.

01:18

He doesn't suck anyone's blood.

01:20

And his vice is kept a little

01:24

under wraps, whereas Dracula is pretty out in the open.

01:29

Another interesting example sort of from the Victorian era

01:33

would probably be something like

01:35

in Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre,

01:37

another Gothic novel. Victorian Gothic novel.

01:40

The character

01:42

Bertha Mason Rochester, who is

01:45

Mr. Rochester's first wife

01:47

from the West Indies,

01:49

who he keeps trapped in the attic because she goes mad.

01:52

She's...

01:54

Gothic in the sense that

01:55

there's a suspense and mystery that surrounds her.

01:57

But she's not a vampire.

01:59

But it's one of the first instances in the Victorian novel

02:01

where "vampire" is mentioned.

02:03

Because Jane Eyre sort of comes upon her.

02:06

The secret is revealed - who is kicking up a rumpus in the attic.

02:09

And it's this imprisoned woman.

02:11

And she likens her to

02:13

the German vampire.

02:14

[ hissing ]

02:16

So when we think about the primary characteristics,

02:19

we should focus on - as we're reading Dracula and studying it.

02:21

It's that he's a vampire. He's supernatural.

02:24

[ explosion ]

02:25

And that he

02:28

traverses across the European continent.

02:30

- He's not based in one... - Certainly. He's not -- Yeah.

02:32

He's not static at all.

02:34

But he's one of the first European characters

02:37

that sort of traverses the European system.

02:39

He goes all the way from Carpathia

02:42

to London and back again

02:44

via transit.

02:46

Via different transit modes.

02:48

Okay.

02:53

[ whoop ]

02:54

What other Gothic characters were around at the same time as Dracula?

03:01

[ ooh ]

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