This document discusses how many biographies of Bram Stoker, the author of Dracula, focus on exploring Stoker's relationship with actor Henry Irving and investigating Stoker's sexuality. It examines how Stoker has been portrayed as experiencing same-sex desire for Irving based on clues in Stoker's own works like Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving and Dracula. The concept of "homosocial desire" from Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick's work is used as a framework to analyze Stokerian biographies and their depictions of Stoker's libidinal life and relationship with Irving. While questions remain about Stoker's sexuality, biographies generally present the theory that Stoker experienced same
The author in_literary_theory_and_theories_of_litesharanuholal
This document discusses the changing role of the author in literary theory over time. It begins by noting that modern literary theory has largely viewed the author as unimportant compared to the text itself. However, writer-critics like Proust and James in the late 19th century began exploring the separation between authors and their literary personas. New Criticism in the 20th century rejected biographical analysis and focused solely on close readings of texts. While the author was ignored by early Russian Formalism, New Criticism addressed questions of authorial intention. The concept of an "implied author" emerged to distinguish between real authors and the personas constructed in their works. Overall, the author remains a ghostly presence that haunts the boundaries of texts
The document summarizes Amitav Ghosh's novel "The Shadow Lines". It provides background on the author, publication details of the novel, and discusses key themes like nationalism. It also summarizes the plot, which follows a young narrator and his memories of his cousin Ila. The novel examines how political boundaries are created and can divide societies, as seen in the division of India. It analyzes memories and connections between people and places across borders.
This document provides a literary analysis of the David Foster Wallace short story "Lyndon." It summarizes the plot of the story, which fictionalizes aspects of former President Lyndon B. Johnson's life through the perspective of a narrator who works for Johnson. The analysis argues that Wallace hybridizes fact and fiction to explore postmodern concepts like the gap between language and experience. Key evidence discussed includes block quotes within the story that mimic Johnson's real speech patterns. The document considers how Wallace's blending of reality and imitation aims to represent the human experience.
The Teller & The Tales: A Study of The Novels of Amitav GhoshQUESTJOURNAL
ABSTRACT: The paper re-visit the plot and setting of the novels of Amitav Ghosh. The paper has two parts – (i)The Teller & (ii) The Tales. In the first section the text tries to give a brief sketch of the life of Amitav Ghosh to chornicle the life of the visionary commentator of life and the social anthroplogist , the most prominent among the Indian writers of English. In the second part the theme and storyline of the novels were revisted along with characters and narrative technique. The first section has been introduced to give an overview of the prolificness of the author and the second part is the testimony of his logocentricism. The paper aims to present the plot and theme of all Ghosh’s novels
Recharting the Narrative of Subalternity in Amitav Ghosh’ Sea of PoppiesIJLP
This article analyses explores the transformation of the discourse of the novel to narrate the story of indenture.
It shows how from the double insider-outsider perspective as a researcher-mic Amitav Ghosh uses anthropological and historical perspectives to renegotiate discourses of subalternity from the perspective of the indenture diaspora
This document provides an analytical study of the 2013 film adaptation of The Great Gatsby directed by Baz Luhrmann. It discusses Linda Hutcheon's theory of adaptation, which examines what is adapted, who the adapter is and their motivations, how the adaptation is constructed, and the contextual influences of when and where it was adapted. The study aims to analyze the similarities and differences between the novel and film through Hutcheon's framework. It provides context on the relationship between literature and film historically and discusses key adaptation scholars. The methodology draws on comparative literature and focuses on applying Hutcheon's adaptation categories to Luhrmann's The Great Gatsby film.
Fictional characters and literary practicesKen Prameswara
This document discusses the ontological status of fictional characters. It argues that the nature of fictional characters is determined by the beliefs and practices of those who engage with works of literature, such as literary critics. Any acceptable realist theory of fictional characters must generally preserve the common conception of characters held by these communities. The document also argues that since the existence conditions for fictional characters are minimal according to these beliefs and practices, it makes little sense to deny their existence. Finally, it notes that the role of ordinary beliefs and practices in defining fictional characters explains why theories of fiction cannot provide definite answers to all questions about characters.
This document provides a summary and analysis of Winston's transition from a structuralist to poststructuralist discourse in George Orwell's novel 1984. In the beginning, Winston analyzes the political situation from a structuralist perspective, believing the proles will overthrow the oppressive Party. However, after being tortured, Winston comes to accept the Party's poststructuralist discourse of doublethink and the mutability of history and language. The document analyzes this transition through the lenses of structuralism, poststructuralism, Foucault's theories of discourse and power, and postmodern architecture. It argues Winston ultimately betrays his beliefs by allowing the Party to fully control his mind.
The author in_literary_theory_and_theories_of_litesharanuholal
This document discusses the changing role of the author in literary theory over time. It begins by noting that modern literary theory has largely viewed the author as unimportant compared to the text itself. However, writer-critics like Proust and James in the late 19th century began exploring the separation between authors and their literary personas. New Criticism in the 20th century rejected biographical analysis and focused solely on close readings of texts. While the author was ignored by early Russian Formalism, New Criticism addressed questions of authorial intention. The concept of an "implied author" emerged to distinguish between real authors and the personas constructed in their works. Overall, the author remains a ghostly presence that haunts the boundaries of texts
The document summarizes Amitav Ghosh's novel "The Shadow Lines". It provides background on the author, publication details of the novel, and discusses key themes like nationalism. It also summarizes the plot, which follows a young narrator and his memories of his cousin Ila. The novel examines how political boundaries are created and can divide societies, as seen in the division of India. It analyzes memories and connections between people and places across borders.
This document provides a literary analysis of the David Foster Wallace short story "Lyndon." It summarizes the plot of the story, which fictionalizes aspects of former President Lyndon B. Johnson's life through the perspective of a narrator who works for Johnson. The analysis argues that Wallace hybridizes fact and fiction to explore postmodern concepts like the gap between language and experience. Key evidence discussed includes block quotes within the story that mimic Johnson's real speech patterns. The document considers how Wallace's blending of reality and imitation aims to represent the human experience.
The Teller & The Tales: A Study of The Novels of Amitav GhoshQUESTJOURNAL
ABSTRACT: The paper re-visit the plot and setting of the novels of Amitav Ghosh. The paper has two parts – (i)The Teller & (ii) The Tales. In the first section the text tries to give a brief sketch of the life of Amitav Ghosh to chornicle the life of the visionary commentator of life and the social anthroplogist , the most prominent among the Indian writers of English. In the second part the theme and storyline of the novels were revisted along with characters and narrative technique. The first section has been introduced to give an overview of the prolificness of the author and the second part is the testimony of his logocentricism. The paper aims to present the plot and theme of all Ghosh’s novels
Recharting the Narrative of Subalternity in Amitav Ghosh’ Sea of PoppiesIJLP
This article analyses explores the transformation of the discourse of the novel to narrate the story of indenture.
It shows how from the double insider-outsider perspective as a researcher-mic Amitav Ghosh uses anthropological and historical perspectives to renegotiate discourses of subalternity from the perspective of the indenture diaspora
This document provides an analytical study of the 2013 film adaptation of The Great Gatsby directed by Baz Luhrmann. It discusses Linda Hutcheon's theory of adaptation, which examines what is adapted, who the adapter is and their motivations, how the adaptation is constructed, and the contextual influences of when and where it was adapted. The study aims to analyze the similarities and differences between the novel and film through Hutcheon's framework. It provides context on the relationship between literature and film historically and discusses key adaptation scholars. The methodology draws on comparative literature and focuses on applying Hutcheon's adaptation categories to Luhrmann's The Great Gatsby film.
Fictional characters and literary practicesKen Prameswara
This document discusses the ontological status of fictional characters. It argues that the nature of fictional characters is determined by the beliefs and practices of those who engage with works of literature, such as literary critics. Any acceptable realist theory of fictional characters must generally preserve the common conception of characters held by these communities. The document also argues that since the existence conditions for fictional characters are minimal according to these beliefs and practices, it makes little sense to deny their existence. Finally, it notes that the role of ordinary beliefs and practices in defining fictional characters explains why theories of fiction cannot provide definite answers to all questions about characters.
This document provides a summary and analysis of Winston's transition from a structuralist to poststructuralist discourse in George Orwell's novel 1984. In the beginning, Winston analyzes the political situation from a structuralist perspective, believing the proles will overthrow the oppressive Party. However, after being tortured, Winston comes to accept the Party's poststructuralist discourse of doublethink and the mutability of history and language. The document analyzes this transition through the lenses of structuralism, poststructuralism, Foucault's theories of discourse and power, and postmodern architecture. It argues Winston ultimately betrays his beliefs by allowing the Party to fully control his mind.
Analysing the post_colonial_aspects_of_midnight childrenGoswami Mahirpari
The document provides an abstract and literature review for a research paper analyzing postcolonial aspects of Salman Rushdie's novel Midnight's Children. Some key points:
1) The paper examines how Rushdie's novel is a perfect example of a postcolonial work that uses magical realism to uncover truths about India's history and the intermingling of public and personal histories.
2) The literature review discusses several sources that analyze postcolonialism, Rushdie as an author, and aspects of Midnight's Children like its use of allegory, counter-colonial discourse, metanarratives, magic realism and hybridity.
3) Postcolonial literature typically addresses the issues and
This summary provides an overview of a dissertation analyzing Virginia Woolf's The Years and the character of Sara/Elvira in relation to disability and anti-eugenic ethics in modernist literature. The dissertation argues that modernist literature can convey acceptance of physical and cognitive differences, contrary to previous views. It examines Woolf's novels, including how she developed the character of Sara/Elvira over drafts of The Years to explore feminist themes and social exclusion through dialogue between Sara and her sister. The dissertation analyzes how Woolf incorporated historical facts and research into the novel to underpin it with feminist analysis and social context.
The narrator analyzes the emergence of women writers in England from the 16th century onward. She traces how aristocratic women like Lady Winchilsea and Margaret Cavendish were among the first to write, despite public disapproval, due to their relative freedom and resources. The letters of Dorothy Osborne reveal a verbal gift alongside disdain for women who write. Aphra Behn was a turning point as a middle-class woman who made a living through writing in defiance of conventions. This paved the way for 19th century novelists like Jane Austen and George Eliot. The narrator theorizes why the novel became the preferred form for these early women writers.
This document provides an analysis of two Victorian poems, Aurora Leigh by Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Goblin Market by Christina Rossetti, examining their depictions of early feminism. It discusses the Victorian context, relevant feminist theories, and analyses characters and themes in the two poems related to women's issues of the time like domesticity, employment, education, sexuality, and sisterhood. The analysis shows how the poems illuminated feminist concepts through different literary techniques while also critiquing norms of Victorian society.
This review summarizes Harold Bloom's 2007 book Kabbalah and Criticism. Bloom is interested in the Kabbalah not as a Kabbalist but because it provides a framework for his theory of poetic influence. The Kabbalah depicts a world of revisionary interpretation where later texts aim to establish anteriority over prior texts. Bloom finds parallels between this and his own theory of poets revising prior works through misreading in order to reduce anxiety over influences. The review examines Bloom's use of Kabbalist concepts like the sefirot and his view of the Kabbalah as a theory of exile and belatedness highly relevant for literary criticism.
Metafiction is a type of fiction that is self-referential by drawing attention to itself as an artifact. Historiographic metafiction attempts to confront history through fiction by rewriting history in a way that has not been recorded before. It blurs the line between history and fiction. Salman Rushdie's novel Midnight's Children uses techniques like magic realism, allegory and metafiction to subversively historicize and problematize certain events in Indian history by making the protagonist Saleem's personal life mirror that of India's with magical connections. Through Saleem's "chutnification" or pickling of history, Rushdie undermines conventional ideas of historicity by positing multiple histories. The narrative can
PhD Research Proposal of Kaushal Desai (PPT)Kaushal Desai
My PhD research proposal entitled “Manifestation of New Historicism in Select Graphic Novels of Art Spiegelman, Will Eisner and Alan Moore”. Right now I am pursuing my PhD from Department of English, Shri Govind Guru University, Godhra. I have joined PhD in the faculty of Arts and in English subject. My guide is Dr. Anuragsinh D. Puvar. My PhD Registration No is 2010681.
No Home like place The Lesson of History in Kazip Ishiguro's An Artist of the...Goswami Mahirpari
This document discusses Kazuo Ishiguro's novel An Artist of the Floating World. The novel is narrated by Masuji Ono, a disgraced war painter in postwar Japan trying to marry off his daughter. Though the war's catastrophic consequences are not directly mentioned, they loom in the silences of Ono's ruminations. Some critics view Ono's narrative as self-delusion to avoid responsibility, but the document argues the novel examines how societies construct moral right through condemning the past to validate the present. It views Ono's experience not as guilt but shame imposed by new social norms after regime change following Japan's defeat.
2014.6 journal of literature and art studiesDoris Carly
This document provides information about the Journal of Literature and Art Studies, including its publication details, aims and scope, editorial board members, submission guidelines, and contact information. It is a monthly academic journal covering research on literature, art, culture, and art history. It is published in both print and online formats by David Publishing Company in New York. The journal aims to publish the latest research findings and achievements from experts worldwide in these fields. It has an international editorial board and invites manuscript submissions in various formats.
The document provides an overview of a university course on fiction. It discusses early fictional records from cultures around the world, including Epic of Gilgamesh, Zhuangzi, One Thousand and One Nights, and The Tale of Genji. It then defines what fiction is and explores genres and elements of fiction like plot, setting, characters, theme, and point of view. The course will cover the history of the English novel in subsequent sessions.
This document provides a summary and analysis of themes in Jean Rhys' novels Voyage in the Dark and Wide Sargasso Sea. Both novels follow young women from the West Indies struggling to survive in patriarchal societies. While Voyage in the Dark is set in 1920s London and Wide Sargasso Sea is set in the 19th century Caribbean, both novels explore themes of female loneliness, despair, and oppression under patriarchal systems. Neither novel follows a traditional bildungsroman structure, as the protagonists are unable to develop or find their place in society due to their marginalized positions. The analysis draws connections to Jack Halberstam's concept of "shadow feminism" to understand how Rhys
This dissertation analyzes themes of memory, unreliability, and ethics in three novels by Kazuo Ishiguro: An Artist of the Floating World, The Remains of the Day, and Never Let Me Go. The introduction outlines how the narrators in each novel suppress painful memories, making them unreliable. It also discusses Ishiguro's life as a Japanese author writing in English and his interest in outsider perspectives. The dissertation is divided into three chapters, each analyzing one novel and building on ideas from previous chapters. Key arguments are that the narrators suppress memories of traumatic past events, and their unreliable narratives stem from coping with these experiences. The conclusion is that while the narrators gain some understanding by telling their stories
This document provides a summary of a dissertation written by İpek Gürün on the use of elements of Gothic novels during the Victorian Era. The summary includes:
1) Gothic novels during this period featured horror themes like death, terror, and madness as well as supernatural elements like ghosts, vampires, and monsters. Notable Gothic novels from the Victorian Era included Frankenstein, Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Wuthering Heights, and Dracula.
2) Women were often portrayed as being oppressed by patriarchal societies in these novels. Novels like Dracula and works by the Bronte sisters examined the roles of women and how they struggled against the expectations of men
This document provides a summary and analysis of J.M. Coetzee's novel "In the Heart of the Country" from a post-colonial feminist perspective. It discusses how the main character Magda struggles against the oppressive patriarchal order represented by her father. Magda seeks to express herself and reject the submissive role expected of her as a woman in Afrikaner society. The kitchen emerges as a symbol of power and space from which Magda plans to end her oppression by murdering her father. The analysis examines how Coetzee uses Magda to critique gender roles and identities under apartheid in South Africa.
- Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys retells the story of Bertha Mason from Jane Eyre from a postcolonial perspective, focusing on her life as Antoinette in the West Indies before her marriage.
- Rhys aims to give voice to the silenced and marginalized characters in Jane Eyre, particularly Antoinette/Bertha, and depict the orientalist attitudes towards Creole people in the Caribbean.
- Through multiple narrators, Rhys questions the reality of Antoinette's supposed madness and generates sympathy for her as a victim of patriarchal and imperial oppression, in contrast to Mr. Rochester.
This document provides information about a paper submitted by Umaba Gohil on the topic of New Historicism. New Historicism aims to understand literary works through their historical context and time/place of composition. It views culture as text and literature as reflecting and commenting on its sociocultural context. New Historicists study both canonical and non-canonical works and take an interdisciplinary approach, discussing politics, class and power in relation to literature.
"I Alone devote pages of papers to her": Kingston's Blurringof Generic and Ge...QUESTJOURNAL
ABSTRACT: Maxine Hong Kingston‟s first two novels are set in a “ Border Country” that is situated at the Intersection between „The Gold Mountain‟ and „China‟. The first text spans the life experience of the female Chinese subject ( mythical, family member , immigrant) as well as all the male descendants , (immigrants) who travelled to the gold mountain. Kingston writing aims to subvert an old tradition of silence in the two continents. First, the two books begin with instances of obstructing communication. In The Woman Warrior, Brave Orchid warns her daughter ―You must not tell anyone‖ (11). In China Men, old women threaten to sew Tang Ao„s lips shut warning him ―The less you struggle, the less it„ll hurt‖ (1). Second both novels close by casting one„s voice while having another ―I‖ to listen and recognize them. Therefore the purpose of this article is to delineate the border space where gender and generic boundaries blur and the Chinese/American subjects operate within moveable limits.
Your pen your ink coetzees foe robinson crusoe and the polGoswami Mahirpari
This document summarizes an academic journal article that analyzes J.M. Coetzee's novel Foe as a parody of Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe. It argues that Coetzee uses parody to critique not just Defoe's novel, but the broader ideology of colonialism that Crusoe represents. By claiming Foe preceded Crusoe, Coetzee throws the realism of Crusoe into doubt and suggests Defoe manipulated the truth. Coetzee also artificially reconstructs silenced voices in Crusoe to show how Defoe promoted justifications for colonial power. The summary aims to uncover what these two "voices" say about colonialism and its justifications through a comparison of key
This document summarizes a study analyzing themes of displacement in Jean Rhys' novel Wide Sargasso Sea. The study focuses on the unnamed Western husband of the main character Antoinette and reasons for his feelings of displacement in the Caribbean. It provides context on post-colonial theory and previous analyses of the novel, which primarily centered on Antoinette's oppression. The objective is to understand the husband's perspective and how his alienation contributed to his mistreatment of Antoinette.
1. Modernism in literature emerged in response to rapid social and technological changes in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Writers felt alienated from Victorian traditions and sought new forms of expression.
2. Two influential modernist movements were Impressionism in painting, which focused on depicting light, and Symbolism in poetry, which emphasized symbolic meanings in words.
3. By the early 1900s, modernist artists fully broke with tradition, rejecting realism and established forms, as seen in Picasso's Cubist works and Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring ballet. This defined modernism as disruptive rather than progressive.
Emily Bronte was a famous English poet and novelist born in 1818 in Yorkshire. She is best known for her only novel Wuthering Heights, published in 1847 under the pseudonym Ellis Bell. The novel, set amongst the Yorkshire moors that inspired Bronte, tells a story of love, hate, sorrow and death and was ahead of its time in its structure and complexity. Bronte spent most of her life in the village of Haworth with her father, aunt and siblings Anne and Charlotte, both of whom also became writers. She had a short, difficult life and career as a teacher before dedicating herself fully to writing and domestic duties at home, where she died of tuberculosis in 1848 at the young age
Analysing the post_colonial_aspects_of_midnight childrenGoswami Mahirpari
The document provides an abstract and literature review for a research paper analyzing postcolonial aspects of Salman Rushdie's novel Midnight's Children. Some key points:
1) The paper examines how Rushdie's novel is a perfect example of a postcolonial work that uses magical realism to uncover truths about India's history and the intermingling of public and personal histories.
2) The literature review discusses several sources that analyze postcolonialism, Rushdie as an author, and aspects of Midnight's Children like its use of allegory, counter-colonial discourse, metanarratives, magic realism and hybridity.
3) Postcolonial literature typically addresses the issues and
This summary provides an overview of a dissertation analyzing Virginia Woolf's The Years and the character of Sara/Elvira in relation to disability and anti-eugenic ethics in modernist literature. The dissertation argues that modernist literature can convey acceptance of physical and cognitive differences, contrary to previous views. It examines Woolf's novels, including how she developed the character of Sara/Elvira over drafts of The Years to explore feminist themes and social exclusion through dialogue between Sara and her sister. The dissertation analyzes how Woolf incorporated historical facts and research into the novel to underpin it with feminist analysis and social context.
The narrator analyzes the emergence of women writers in England from the 16th century onward. She traces how aristocratic women like Lady Winchilsea and Margaret Cavendish were among the first to write, despite public disapproval, due to their relative freedom and resources. The letters of Dorothy Osborne reveal a verbal gift alongside disdain for women who write. Aphra Behn was a turning point as a middle-class woman who made a living through writing in defiance of conventions. This paved the way for 19th century novelists like Jane Austen and George Eliot. The narrator theorizes why the novel became the preferred form for these early women writers.
This document provides an analysis of two Victorian poems, Aurora Leigh by Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Goblin Market by Christina Rossetti, examining their depictions of early feminism. It discusses the Victorian context, relevant feminist theories, and analyses characters and themes in the two poems related to women's issues of the time like domesticity, employment, education, sexuality, and sisterhood. The analysis shows how the poems illuminated feminist concepts through different literary techniques while also critiquing norms of Victorian society.
This review summarizes Harold Bloom's 2007 book Kabbalah and Criticism. Bloom is interested in the Kabbalah not as a Kabbalist but because it provides a framework for his theory of poetic influence. The Kabbalah depicts a world of revisionary interpretation where later texts aim to establish anteriority over prior texts. Bloom finds parallels between this and his own theory of poets revising prior works through misreading in order to reduce anxiety over influences. The review examines Bloom's use of Kabbalist concepts like the sefirot and his view of the Kabbalah as a theory of exile and belatedness highly relevant for literary criticism.
Metafiction is a type of fiction that is self-referential by drawing attention to itself as an artifact. Historiographic metafiction attempts to confront history through fiction by rewriting history in a way that has not been recorded before. It blurs the line between history and fiction. Salman Rushdie's novel Midnight's Children uses techniques like magic realism, allegory and metafiction to subversively historicize and problematize certain events in Indian history by making the protagonist Saleem's personal life mirror that of India's with magical connections. Through Saleem's "chutnification" or pickling of history, Rushdie undermines conventional ideas of historicity by positing multiple histories. The narrative can
PhD Research Proposal of Kaushal Desai (PPT)Kaushal Desai
My PhD research proposal entitled “Manifestation of New Historicism in Select Graphic Novels of Art Spiegelman, Will Eisner and Alan Moore”. Right now I am pursuing my PhD from Department of English, Shri Govind Guru University, Godhra. I have joined PhD in the faculty of Arts and in English subject. My guide is Dr. Anuragsinh D. Puvar. My PhD Registration No is 2010681.
No Home like place The Lesson of History in Kazip Ishiguro's An Artist of the...Goswami Mahirpari
This document discusses Kazuo Ishiguro's novel An Artist of the Floating World. The novel is narrated by Masuji Ono, a disgraced war painter in postwar Japan trying to marry off his daughter. Though the war's catastrophic consequences are not directly mentioned, they loom in the silences of Ono's ruminations. Some critics view Ono's narrative as self-delusion to avoid responsibility, but the document argues the novel examines how societies construct moral right through condemning the past to validate the present. It views Ono's experience not as guilt but shame imposed by new social norms after regime change following Japan's defeat.
2014.6 journal of literature and art studiesDoris Carly
This document provides information about the Journal of Literature and Art Studies, including its publication details, aims and scope, editorial board members, submission guidelines, and contact information. It is a monthly academic journal covering research on literature, art, culture, and art history. It is published in both print and online formats by David Publishing Company in New York. The journal aims to publish the latest research findings and achievements from experts worldwide in these fields. It has an international editorial board and invites manuscript submissions in various formats.
The document provides an overview of a university course on fiction. It discusses early fictional records from cultures around the world, including Epic of Gilgamesh, Zhuangzi, One Thousand and One Nights, and The Tale of Genji. It then defines what fiction is and explores genres and elements of fiction like plot, setting, characters, theme, and point of view. The course will cover the history of the English novel in subsequent sessions.
This document provides a summary and analysis of themes in Jean Rhys' novels Voyage in the Dark and Wide Sargasso Sea. Both novels follow young women from the West Indies struggling to survive in patriarchal societies. While Voyage in the Dark is set in 1920s London and Wide Sargasso Sea is set in the 19th century Caribbean, both novels explore themes of female loneliness, despair, and oppression under patriarchal systems. Neither novel follows a traditional bildungsroman structure, as the protagonists are unable to develop or find their place in society due to their marginalized positions. The analysis draws connections to Jack Halberstam's concept of "shadow feminism" to understand how Rhys
This dissertation analyzes themes of memory, unreliability, and ethics in three novels by Kazuo Ishiguro: An Artist of the Floating World, The Remains of the Day, and Never Let Me Go. The introduction outlines how the narrators in each novel suppress painful memories, making them unreliable. It also discusses Ishiguro's life as a Japanese author writing in English and his interest in outsider perspectives. The dissertation is divided into three chapters, each analyzing one novel and building on ideas from previous chapters. Key arguments are that the narrators suppress memories of traumatic past events, and their unreliable narratives stem from coping with these experiences. The conclusion is that while the narrators gain some understanding by telling their stories
This document provides a summary of a dissertation written by İpek Gürün on the use of elements of Gothic novels during the Victorian Era. The summary includes:
1) Gothic novels during this period featured horror themes like death, terror, and madness as well as supernatural elements like ghosts, vampires, and monsters. Notable Gothic novels from the Victorian Era included Frankenstein, Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Wuthering Heights, and Dracula.
2) Women were often portrayed as being oppressed by patriarchal societies in these novels. Novels like Dracula and works by the Bronte sisters examined the roles of women and how they struggled against the expectations of men
This document provides a summary and analysis of J.M. Coetzee's novel "In the Heart of the Country" from a post-colonial feminist perspective. It discusses how the main character Magda struggles against the oppressive patriarchal order represented by her father. Magda seeks to express herself and reject the submissive role expected of her as a woman in Afrikaner society. The kitchen emerges as a symbol of power and space from which Magda plans to end her oppression by murdering her father. The analysis examines how Coetzee uses Magda to critique gender roles and identities under apartheid in South Africa.
- Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys retells the story of Bertha Mason from Jane Eyre from a postcolonial perspective, focusing on her life as Antoinette in the West Indies before her marriage.
- Rhys aims to give voice to the silenced and marginalized characters in Jane Eyre, particularly Antoinette/Bertha, and depict the orientalist attitudes towards Creole people in the Caribbean.
- Through multiple narrators, Rhys questions the reality of Antoinette's supposed madness and generates sympathy for her as a victim of patriarchal and imperial oppression, in contrast to Mr. Rochester.
This document provides information about a paper submitted by Umaba Gohil on the topic of New Historicism. New Historicism aims to understand literary works through their historical context and time/place of composition. It views culture as text and literature as reflecting and commenting on its sociocultural context. New Historicists study both canonical and non-canonical works and take an interdisciplinary approach, discussing politics, class and power in relation to literature.
"I Alone devote pages of papers to her": Kingston's Blurringof Generic and Ge...QUESTJOURNAL
ABSTRACT: Maxine Hong Kingston‟s first two novels are set in a “ Border Country” that is situated at the Intersection between „The Gold Mountain‟ and „China‟. The first text spans the life experience of the female Chinese subject ( mythical, family member , immigrant) as well as all the male descendants , (immigrants) who travelled to the gold mountain. Kingston writing aims to subvert an old tradition of silence in the two continents. First, the two books begin with instances of obstructing communication. In The Woman Warrior, Brave Orchid warns her daughter ―You must not tell anyone‖ (11). In China Men, old women threaten to sew Tang Ao„s lips shut warning him ―The less you struggle, the less it„ll hurt‖ (1). Second both novels close by casting one„s voice while having another ―I‖ to listen and recognize them. Therefore the purpose of this article is to delineate the border space where gender and generic boundaries blur and the Chinese/American subjects operate within moveable limits.
Your pen your ink coetzees foe robinson crusoe and the polGoswami Mahirpari
This document summarizes an academic journal article that analyzes J.M. Coetzee's novel Foe as a parody of Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe. It argues that Coetzee uses parody to critique not just Defoe's novel, but the broader ideology of colonialism that Crusoe represents. By claiming Foe preceded Crusoe, Coetzee throws the realism of Crusoe into doubt and suggests Defoe manipulated the truth. Coetzee also artificially reconstructs silenced voices in Crusoe to show how Defoe promoted justifications for colonial power. The summary aims to uncover what these two "voices" say about colonialism and its justifications through a comparison of key
This document summarizes a study analyzing themes of displacement in Jean Rhys' novel Wide Sargasso Sea. The study focuses on the unnamed Western husband of the main character Antoinette and reasons for his feelings of displacement in the Caribbean. It provides context on post-colonial theory and previous analyses of the novel, which primarily centered on Antoinette's oppression. The objective is to understand the husband's perspective and how his alienation contributed to his mistreatment of Antoinette.
1. Modernism in literature emerged in response to rapid social and technological changes in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Writers felt alienated from Victorian traditions and sought new forms of expression.
2. Two influential modernist movements were Impressionism in painting, which focused on depicting light, and Symbolism in poetry, which emphasized symbolic meanings in words.
3. By the early 1900s, modernist artists fully broke with tradition, rejecting realism and established forms, as seen in Picasso's Cubist works and Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring ballet. This defined modernism as disruptive rather than progressive.
Emily Bronte was a famous English poet and novelist born in 1818 in Yorkshire. She is best known for her only novel Wuthering Heights, published in 1847 under the pseudonym Ellis Bell. The novel, set amongst the Yorkshire moors that inspired Bronte, tells a story of love, hate, sorrow and death and was ahead of its time in its structure and complexity. Bronte spent most of her life in the village of Haworth with her father, aunt and siblings Anne and Charlotte, both of whom also became writers. She had a short, difficult life and career as a teacher before dedicating herself fully to writing and domestic duties at home, where she died of tuberculosis in 1848 at the young age
This document provides a biography of Mary Shelley in 3 sentences:
Mary Shelley was the daughter of pioneering feminist Mary Wollstonecraft and philosopher William Godwin. She eloped with the already married poet Percy Bysshe Shelley in 1814 and traveled with him through Europe, where she began writing Frankenstein in 1816. Frankenstein was published anonymously in 1818 and established Mary Shelley as an author, though she continued to suffer tragedies such as multiple child deaths that took an emotional toll on her.
William Shakespeare was born in 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon, England to John Shakespeare and Mary Arden. He likely attended the local grammar school where he would have learned Latin and history. In the 1580s, Shakespeare married Anne Hathaway and had three children, but spent much of his time in London working as an actor and playwright, writing around 40 plays. Shakespeare was also a part owner of acting troupes and theaters. He died in 1616 in his hometown of Stratford-upon-Avon.
La Unión Europea ha acordado un paquete de sanciones contra Rusia por su invasión de Ucrania. Las sanciones incluyen restricciones a los bancos rusos, la prohibición de la venta de aviones y equipos a Rusia, y sanciones contra funcionarios rusos. Los líderes de la UE esperan que las sanciones aumenten la presión económica sobre Rusia y la disuadan de continuar su agresión contra Ucrania.
El propósito de la epistemología es distinguir la ciencia auténtica de la seudociencia, la investigación profunda de la superficial, la búsqueda de la verdad de sólo un modus vivendi. También debe ser capaz de criticar programas y aun resultados erróneos, así como de sugerir nuevos enfoques promisorios.
Platón utilizó dos alegorías para explicar cómo los humanos adquieren conocimiento: la línea y la caverna. La línea divide la realidad en dos secciones, el mundo inteligible y sensible, y los tipos de conocimiento asociados a cada uno. La caverna describe a los prisioneros viendo sombras como su realidad, mientras que uno escapa y descubre el verdadero mundo exterior, pero los demás no le creen. Ambas alegorías distinguen entre conocimiento verdadero basado en las ideas y conocimiento limitado basado en los sentidos.
La alegoría de la caverna pretende poner de manifiesto el estado en que, con respecto a la educación o falta de ella, se halla nuestra naturaleza, es decir, el estado en que se halla la mayoría de los hombres con relación al conocimiento de la verdad o a la ignorancia. Así, los prisioneros representan a la mayoría de la humanidad, esclava y prisionera de su ignorancia e inconsciente de ella, aferrada a las costumbres, opiniones, prejuicios y falsas creencias de siempre. Estos
prisioneros, al igual que la mayoría de los hombres, creen que saben y se sienten felices en su ignorancia, pero viven en el error, y toman por real y verdadero lo que no son sino simples sombras de objetos fabricados y ecos de voces.
Este texto señala el origen del término epistemología, referido a la teoría del
conocimiento científico. El tema está centrado en el desarrollo de la ciencia moderna y en
particular en la crisis de los conceptos básicos a comienzos del siglo XX. Esto significó el
fin de la filosofía especulativa en su capacidad para dar cuenta de las conceptualizaciones
y de las teorías de la ciencia contemporánea. Al avanzar el siglo, también los más destacados
empiristas debieron admitir su fracaso. La renuncia a las posiciones aprioristas y
empiristas llevó a la necesidad de concebir el conocimiento como un proceso constructivo
que al nivel individual se desarrolla desde el nacimiento hasta la edad adulta, y se prolonga
al nivel social con el desarrollo de la ciencia.
La filosofía es un intento del espíritu humano para llegar a una concepción del universo mediante la autorreflexión sobre sus funciones valorativas teóricas y prácticas.
Adam J.G. Erickson is a technical artist introducing himself and his background. He has a high school diploma and attended college for drafting and design. His work experience includes dishwashing, cooking, building trusses, and a short time in the army. His skill sets include Microsoft Office, AutoCAD, Maya, Photoshop, and character/environment design. He believes success means developing purpose, achieving prosperity, and gaining reputation. Critical thinking, problem solving, and effective communication are strengths. Good career fits include architectural, mechanical, and civil design, as well as environment/prop design and lighting design.
El documento presenta una introducción al empresarismo y los sistemas económicos. Explica que un empresario es alguien que crea y dirige un negocio con potencial de crecimiento asumiendo riesgos. También define conceptos como oferta y demanda, y describe los cinco componentes clave del proceso de iniciar un negocio: el empresario, el ambiente, la oportunidad, los recursos iniciales y la organización. Finalmente, destaca las recompensas y riesgos de ser empresario y las características y destrezas
Este documento describe los principios básicos de un sistema de gestión ambiental, incluyendo el compromiso de la dirección, la planificación, la implementación, la medición y la mejora continua. También recomienda realizar una revisión ambiental inicial, definir una política ambiental y objetivos, e implementar el sistema en etapas considerando los recursos disponibles y la integración con otras funciones.
Este documento descreve um estudo sobre a viabilidade da produção de concentrados de cores "dry-blend" para injeção de peças plásticas. O estudo de caso foi realizado na Indústria de Plásticos Cária Ltda., que produz embalagens plásticas para cosméticos e requer uma grande variedade de cores. O trabalho analisou diferentes processos de fabricação de concentrados e concluiu que a produção interna de concentrados do tipo "dry-blend" é a opção mais viável para atender às necessidades da empresa em termos de rapidez,
A woman came to the clinic with cough, blood in mucus, weight loss, fatigue, fever and night sweats for 3 weeks. Tests were done including blood tests, chest X-ray, and tuberculosis tests. She was diagnosed with tuberculosis based on symptoms and tests. Tuberculosis is one of the top 10 causes of death worldwide, infecting over 10 million and killing 1.8 million in 2015. It is treated with a combination of antibiotics over 6 months, but drug-resistant strains are increasing and require longer and more expensive treatments.
The document provides branding guidelines for Fire Avert, a company that creates solutions to prevent stove fires. It describes the inspiration and mission behind the brand. It then outlines the logo, colors, typography, photography styles, and other branding elements that should be used consistently across all marketing materials to represent the Fire Avert brand. Proper and improper uses of the logo are demonstrated. Templates for stationery, web assets, and overall site design are also included to ensure brand messaging is conveyed uniformly.
The document discusses refractive surgery procedures for correcting vision, including LASIK, PRK, and lens implants. It describes how each procedure works to reshape the cornea and lens to reduce nearsightedness, farsightedness, and astigmatism. The risks are generally low but include infection, glare, and gradual refractive change over decades. The benefits are improved vision, though not necessarily perfect vision. Costs typically range from $1000 to $2500 per eye.
Este documento describe el hardware de una computadora. Define hardware como las partes físicas y tangibles de una computadora, incluyendo componentes electrónicos, cables, gabinetes y periféricos. Explica que el hardware básico necesario incluye una unidad de procesamiento central (CPU), memoria, medios de entrada y salida de datos, y almacenamiento. También clasifica el hardware en generaciones basadas en cambios tecnológicos como el uso de tubos de vacío, transistores y circuitos integrados.
The document discusses the results of a study on the effects of a new drug on memory and cognitive function in older adults. The double-blind study involved giving either the new drug or a placebo to 100 volunteers aged 65-80 over a 6 month period. Testing showed those receiving the drug experienced statistically significant improvements in short-term memory retention and processing speed compared to the placebo group.
This paper presents a neural network approach for diagnosing diabetes using mobile devices. A distributed client-server system was developed using neural network computations. The system utilizes a simple two-tier architecture with a patient's PDA as the client and a desktop PC as the server. Neural network operations are optimized for both devices and wireless communication to enable real-time diagnosis via mobile devices.
"Queer theory is a term that has been applied to a body of work that has explored gay, lesbian and bisexual life experience. Crucial to queer theory is the recovery of the concealed and repressed presence of gay and lesbian 'actors' and activities within social and cultural life.
Author Author Shakespeare And BiographyAngel Evans
This document provides an overview of Shakespeare biography and the challenges involved. It discusses how biographies often rely on speculation to fill gaps, as very little factual information is known about Shakespeare's life. The document also examines how biographies are shaped by contemporary perspectives and priorities, with biographers sometimes projecting their own views onto Shakespeare. While seeking facts about Shakespeare, biographies also inevitably reflect the biases and interests of the current era.
This document provides an in-depth analysis of Bram Stoker's novel Dracula and how it engages with themes of Victorianism and postmodernism. It examines how the novel uses blood as a symbolic substance and how different characters interpret its meaning either materially or spiritually. The analysis draws comparisons between Stoker's work and a lecture by T.H. Huxley on protoplasm to discuss how Victorian culture understood the relationship between science and religion. It also analyzes how characters like Renfield and Count Dracula approach blood in either a secular or spiritual way.
1931 Dracula Essay | Dracula | Count Dracula. Dracula Essay | Mina Harker | Abraham Van Helsing. Advanced English Comparative Essay Notes- Dracula and Interview With a .... Dracula Essay. Focussing on chapter fourteen, to what extent do you .... Critical Essay plan for Dracula Drama Script | Teaching Resources. The Influence of Stoker’s Descriptions of Settings on Dracula: [Essay .... Dracula : Essays on the Life and Times of Vlad the Impaler (Edition 2 .... A Level Literature (11) ‘Dracula’ Assessment 1 – Guided Essay Writing .... Need Help Writing an Essay? - dracula essay ideas - familiaressayist .... Dracula Study Guide | Course Hero | Literature, Books, My books. Dracula Essay Topics - 2021 | TopicsMill. Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1992) – Deep Focus Review – Movie Reviews .... A LEVEL ENGLISH LITERATURE: ESSAY QUESTIONS ON "Dracula" | Teaching .... Dracula: Essays on the Life and Times of Vlad Tepes | Essay, Dracula, Life. (DOC) Dracula essay B Ed2 | Jim Moooore - Academia.edu. Comparison Essay for Dracula and Interview with the Vampire | Year 11 .... Reflections on Dracula: Ten Essays: Miller, Elizabeth: 9781551350042 .... Need help do my essay dracula chpt. in depth summary and commentary .... Essay: Frankenstein, Dracula and the Uncanny. Dracula - Essay Questions Interactive for 10th - Higher Ed | Lesson Planet. Exemplar Dracula & The Bloody Chamber Essay | Teaching Resources. Dracula Essay | Year 11 HSC - English (Extension 1) | Thinkswap. Dracula essay titles about death.
The relationship between literature and societyTshen Tashi
The document discusses the relationship between English literature and society from different literary periods in English history. It explores how works from each period reflected aspects of the corresponding society, such as its religion, government structure, views of nature, and lifestyle. For example, Anglo-Saxon works focused on morality through bloodshed while Medieval literature dealt with themes of sin. The document also examines how major historical events like the Industrial Revolution influenced Victorian literature and society. Overall, it analyzes how literature both shaped and was shaped by the societies it emerged from.
This document discusses Virginia Woolf's novel Orlando and queer theory. It begins by defining the term "queer" and tracing the origins of queer theory to gay/lesbian studies in the 1960s-70s. Queer theory challenges stable identities and widens its scope beyond homosexuality. The document then analyzes Orlando, noting how it spans 300 years and features a character who changes gender from male to female. It discusses how the novel emphasizes similarities between men and women and promotes freedom from rigid gender roles. Finally, it argues Orlando can be considered queer life writing as it reconfigures notions of gender, time, and identity in its narrative.
Steele 4
Charisma Steele
Professor Abbott
ENGL 1101
17 SEPTEMBER 2017
The Historical context of “The Importance of Being Earnest” by Oscar Wilde
It is usually imperative to comprehend the motivation behind a given activity or decision. Most literary pieces have been drafted, but most people do not understand what drove the person to come up with such ideas. Oscar Wilde is among the individuals who have been relevant to the literature circle because of his immense contribution to the sector. He has other pieces that he has published, but one of them: "The Importance of Being Earnest" is legendary. Therefore, the discourse will be explaining the historical context of this masterpiece.
The environment where people operate is exceedingly paramount to their existence because most of the things that happen have various degree of influence on the respective individuals. Consequently, people draw inspiration from the events that take place around them. Some people might choose to be silent while others are expressive about their feelings on a given subject. Oscar Wilde belongs to the latter category based on his skills as expressed in “The Importance of Being Earnest" provides a reader with an opportunity of understanding the circumstances that existed during its authorship. The lifestyle of the people during that time gives a clear picture of the characteristics of the society during this period.
"The Importance of Being Earnest" was written at the backdrop of political tension in Ireland. Therefore, some of the utterances that have been made on the play provide an overview of the extent of the differences that could have existed among the people. The issue of Home Rule in Ireland was among the controversial issues at the time. Ideally, in 1886, William Gladstone had caused some tension by committing the British Liberal Party to fortify the quests for Ireland's self-rule (Horz, 36). This move was made under the British Empire framework. The House of Lords thwarted any efforts of the Home Rule Bill. Two years after the rejection of the bill, Oscar Wilde came up with "The Importance of Being Earnest."
The implication of the differences that were brought about by the Home Rule case has been featured in "The Importance of Being Earnest." Oscar Wilde uses the characters in the play to show the reactions of people during that time. In the play, Lady Bracknell asks Jack about his political inclination when he suggested that he wanted to propose to Gwendolen (Wilde &Bristow, 24). This type of question indicates that politics controlled various aspects of people’s lives during that time. Therefore, Lady Bracknell’s intention for asking that question was driven by the need to determine Jack's political correctness before getting serious with Gwendolen. When Jack confirmed to her that he was a Liberal Unionist, she showed a cognizable degree of relief. The line "Oh, they count as Tories. They dine with us" (Wilde &Bristrow, 24) confirms his reply. T.
This document provides background information on Washington Irving's short story "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow." It discusses Irving's biography and the social context in which he wrote. It then analyzes aspects of mysticism and the supernatural in the story. Specifically, it examines how Irving uses descriptions of nature to evoke mysticism and discusses the urban legends and haunted locations that are part of the story's setting. Quotes from the text are provided as examples to support how Irving incorporated mystical elements through the portrayal of the landscape and folklore traditions.
This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
How to Build a Module in Odoo 17 Using the Scaffold MethodCeline George
Odoo provides an option for creating a module by using a single line command. By using this command the user can make a whole structure of a module. It is very easy for a beginner to make a module. There is no need to make each file manually. This slide will show how to create a module using the scaffold method.
Walmart Business+ and Spark Good for Nonprofits.pdfTechSoup
"Learn about all the ways Walmart supports nonprofit organizations.
You will hear from Liz Willett, the Head of Nonprofits, and hear about what Walmart is doing to help nonprofits, including Walmart Business and Spark Good. Walmart Business+ is a new offer for nonprofits that offers discounts and also streamlines nonprofits order and expense tracking, saving time and money.
The webinar may also give some examples on how nonprofits can best leverage Walmart Business+.
The event will cover the following::
Walmart Business + (https://business.walmart.com/plus) is a new shopping experience for nonprofits, schools, and local business customers that connects an exclusive online shopping experience to stores. Benefits include free delivery and shipping, a 'Spend Analytics” feature, special discounts, deals and tax-exempt shopping.
Special TechSoup offer for a free 180 days membership, and up to $150 in discounts on eligible orders.
Spark Good (walmart.com/sparkgood) is a charitable platform that enables nonprofits to receive donations directly from customers and associates.
Answers about how you can do more with Walmart!"
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Find out more about ISO training and certification services
Training: ISO/IEC 27001 Information Security Management System - EN | PECB
ISO/IEC 42001 Artificial Intelligence Management System - EN | PECB
General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) - Training Courses - EN | PECB
Webinars: https://pecb.com/webinars
Article: https://pecb.com/article
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For more information about PECB:
Website: https://pecb.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/pecb/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PECBInternational/
Slideshare: http://www.slideshare.net/PECBCERTIFICATION
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
How to Add Chatter in the odoo 17 ERP ModuleCeline George
In Odoo, the chatter is like a chat tool that helps you work together on records. You can leave notes and track things, making it easier to talk with your team and partners. Inside chatter, all communication history, activity, and changes will be displayed.
it describes the bony anatomy including the femoral head , acetabulum, labrum . also discusses the capsule , ligaments . muscle that act on the hip joint and the range of motion are outlined. factors affecting hip joint stability and weight transmission through the joint are summarized.
Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
1. Brno Studies in English
Volume 37, No. 2, 2011
ISSN 0524-6881
DOI: 10.5817/BSE2011-2-4
Brigitte Boudreau
Libidinal Life:
Bram Stoker, Homosocial Desire
and the Stokerian Biographical Project
Abstract
This paper offers an examination of the Stokerian biographical project and
shows how many biographies of Bram Stoker are invested in uncovering the elu-
sive relationship between this little-known author and the actor Henry Irving.An
exploration of Stokerian biographies reveals how Stoker has been constructed as
a man who experienced same-sex desire, as revealed through his own “autobio-
graphical” texts, such as Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving and Dracula.
Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick’s concept of “homosocial desire” provides a useful
theoretical framework within which to explore a sample selection of Stokerian
biographies, including those of Daniel Farson, Phyllis A. Roth, Barbara Belford
and Paul Murray. This paper maintains that the theories surrounding Stoker’s li-
bidinal life are generally well-grounded, yet to this day several questions remain
unanswered. For many biographers, the life of the author of Dracula continues
to be shrouded in mystery.
Key words
Bram Stoker; biography; Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving; Dracula; Eve
Kosofsky Sedgwick; homosocial desire
We were struck with the fact, that in all the mass of material of which the record
is composed, there is hardly one authentic document; nothing but a mass of type-
writing [...] (Dracula)
In late-nineteenth-century England, sexual attitudes which deviated from the
norm were both demonized and feared. This is reflected in the works of Victorian
author Bram Stoker, for whom adherence to tradition and fixed gender roles were
of utmost importance. Yet a biographical portraiture of the man behind Dracula
2. 42 Brigitte Boudreau
reveals seemingly conflicting findings. Many claim that the fiercely conservative
author exposes his inner maverick upon closer investigation. One of Stoker’s
most obscure works, Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving, for instance, sheds
light on the author’s intense preoccupation with men of power, in particular with
the famed actor Henry Irving. Further, Irving is said to have inspired much of
the text of Dracula, Stoker’s most famous novel. Interestingly, Stoker’s obses-
sive fixation with Irving has become a popular topic for Stokerian life-writers
in recent years. This paper offers an analysis of the biographical focus upon the
sexuality of Bram Stoker, as revealed through a sample selection of contempo-
rary Stokerian biographies. Biographical works dealing with the life of Bram
Stoker largely rely upon the author’s own literary output for autobiographical
“clues” into their subject’s elusive sex life. With this in mind, Eve Kosofsky
Sedgwick’s concept of “homosocial desire” may be used to elucidate the ways in
which Stoker is depicted in biography.
Bram Stoker and “Homosocial Desire”
With the recent surge of Stokerian biographies, the author of Dracula, like the
immortal count, has come to represent a figure of illicit sexuality. It is interesting
to undertake an exploration of how Stoker has been perceived in what I refer to as
the “Stokerian biographical project,” where the texts of Personal Reminiscences
of Henry Irving and Dracula, among others, have come to be regarded as exposi-
tory works, revealing Stoker’s unstable sex life. Indeed, biographers point out
that the texts in question contains important autobiographical revelations about
the author’s sexuality, displaying how Stoker’s life and works are inescapably
linked to the world of forbidden fantasies. By examining the ways in which sexu-
ality and gender relations are presented within the Stokerian biographical project,
one may uncover how the libidinal life of this little-known author may reveal
more about our own desires as readers than those of Bram Stoker.
Without a doubt, life-writers have come to eroticize Stoker in biography and to
engage in queer readings of Personal Reminiscences and Dracula. Eve Kosofsky
Sedgwick’s insights into the “cult(ure)” of nineteenth-century bachelors are par-
ticularly relevant to the study of this late-Victorian author. Using Sedgwick’s notion
of “homosocial desire” as a lens through which to analyze Stokerian biographies,
I propose that the man behind Count Dracula has ultimately been merged with
Irving, and that an understanding of one is incomplete without the other. Indeed,
by seeking out revealing passages from Stoker’s Personal Reminiscences of Henry
Irving as well as autobiographical elements derived from the text of Dracula, many
biographers tend to represent Bram Stoker as a closeted person who experienced
subversive desire for none other than the famed actor Henry Irving.
In Sedgwick’s Between Men: English Literature and Homosocial Desire,
the author reclaims the term “homosocial” and links it to the concept of desire.
Through her analysis of English culture, most particularly her engagement with
3. 43Libidinal Life: Bram Stoker, Homosocial Desire
the mid-eighteenth to mid-nineteenth-century novel, Sedgwick notes the some-
what compelling, recurrent trope of same-sex affection between men. By relating
the idea of the “social” with the notion of “desire” (which she notably distin-
guishes from “love”), the author effectively sexualizes the idea of the “homo-
social,” all the while stressing that it is discernable from the phenomenon of ho-
mosexuality. Sedgwick sees the idea of “homosocial desire” as the “social bonds
between persons of the same sex” (1985: xiii), examples of which include “‘male
bonding,’ which may in our society be characterized by intense homophobia,
fear and hatred of homosexuality” (1). Moreover, the author underlines that for
a “homosocial” bond between males to occur, an isolated environment or delin-
eated space is required, where there is often a conscious and deliberate exclu-
sion of women. Sedgwick further underlines that the idea of “homosocial desire”
emerges from the cultural traditions of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
(as aforementioned), where different forms of male bonding began to be viewed
with much greater suspicion than they had in earlier periods. Out of the fear aris-
ing from homophobia – a fear generally directed towards men, but occasionally
women as well1
– was born the need to qualify proper and indecent forms of male
attachment. For Sedgwick, the realms of the homosocial and homosexual differ,
yet, at the same time, display certain affinities. The author explains how she envi-
sions the twin concepts of homosociality and homosexuality as being along the
same spectrum: “To draw the ‘homosocial’back into the orbit of ‘desire’[...] is to
hypothesize the potential unbrokenness of a continuum between homosocial and
homosexual – a continuum whose visibility, for men, in our society, is radically
disrupted” (1985: 1–2). In short, Sedgwick’s notion of “homosocial desire” may
be categorized as being on the same plane of existence as the homosexual, there-
by displaying that these two forms of male relations share notable similarities.
In Stoker’s works, and Dracula in particular, the realm of the homosocial may
likewise be understood as bordering closely along that of the homosexual. Certain
bonds between men might be said to be “separated only by an invisible, carefully
blurred, always-already-crossed line from being ‘interested in men’” (Sedgwick
1985: 89). Biographers and critics alike have pointed to the timely publication
of Stoker’s vampire novel two years after the advent of the 1895 trial of Oscar
Wilde,2
an incident that significantly marked “the beginnings of dissemination
across classes of language about male homosexuality” (Sedgwick 1985: 179).
Sedgwick reveals that, during this period in gay history, intercourse between men
was not directly referred to, but rather was known as an “unspeakable” act,3
and
this trope of the unspeakable constantly manifests itself throughout Victorian lit-
erature (1985: 94). Sedgwick, thus, provides a useful way of exploring relations
between men in the Victorian era, as Stephen Arata concurs:
[T]he continuum linking the homoerotic and the homosocial is central to
modern Western cultures, yet it is also invariably occluded. Making the links
visible can help us better to see among other things, the specific historical
circumstances to which different forms of male bonding respond. (1996: 79)
4. 44 Brigitte Boudreau
Arata underscores that Sedgwick’s notions about masculinity help to navigate
through a social study of relations “between men,” and Stoker certainly provides
an ideal homosocial subject from this perspective. Bearing this in mind, an analy-
sis of Stoker’s homosocial portrayal in biography, which focuses largely on his
relationship with Irving, may be undertaken.
The Stokerian Biographical Project
The Stokerian biographical project represents an important yet often overlooked
facet of the phenomenon that is Dracula. The first comprehensive biography of
Stoker appeared in 1962 with Harry Ludlam’s A Biography of Dracula: The Life
Story of Bram Stoker. In the 1970s, Stoker’s work was excavated by Freudians
who found that a stake was more than just a stake. The novel began to receive
widespread critical attention with the publication of Leonard Wolf’s The Anno-
tated Dracula (1975). Although Wolf – arguably the first Dracula scholar – has
acknowledged the possibility that vampirism in the text represents a coded mani-
festation of repressed sexual desires, Stoker himself fervently denied this inter-
pretation.4
Although Stoker remained steadfast in his view that there was nothing
sexual in his famous Gothic tale, biographers contend that the stalking, sucking
and staking in Dracula must have registered on some suggestive plane in the
mind of its author. Indeed, Barbara Belford notes that Stoker was conscious of
the subtext of Dracula: “Stoker was an intelligent and insightful man [...] He was
many things, but naïve was not one of them; he was fully aware of the subtexts
in his horror tale” (1996: xii-iii). Clearly, many biographers and critics find them-
selves at the opposite end of Stoker’s interpretive spectrum.
Dracula scholars now abound, and several biographies have come to the fore,
each promising a new and more exhaustive study of Stoker than the last. De-
spite the different approaches that these life-writers take, all focus largely upon
Stoker’s unique relationship with Henry Irving, the most celebrated actor of the
nineteenth century, whom Stoker served as acting manager and unofficially as
personal assistant and secretary (Dorn 1997).5
Biographers claim that Irving was
the main inspiration for Count Dracula, and that any understanding of this mas-
terpiece is incomplete without recognizing the immeasurable extent of the actor’s
impact upon Stoker’s literary career. Many have described the friendship as one
where Irving – like the notorious Count – depleted Stoker both physically and
emotionally, from the moment they met until Irving’s last breath.
Stokerians generally agree that the author’s slavish devotion began on his first
meeting with Irving.6
They further recount other memorable episodes in the Stok-
er-Irving saga, such as when Irving hired aids to unofficially take over Stoker’s
position, thus “betraying” his loyal friend. Even after Irving’s death, Stoker per-
sisted in his devotion to Irving, and in 1906 wrote the idolatrous two-volume,
760-page biography entitled Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving, a work
that ironically reveals much about the author himself. By exploring the treasure
5. 45Libidinal Life: Bram Stoker, Homosocial Desire
trove of hidden meanings that lie within Personal Reminiscences and Dracula,
many biographers have advanced different theories surrounding Stoker’s elusive
sexuality and possible homosexual attraction to Irving. Although the author of
Dracula still remains in the realm of the shadows, these commendable biographi-
cal works dare to speculate on the sexuality of their subject in light of the ho-
mosocial culture of late-Victorian London. A sample study of some of the most
prominent Stokerian biographies include: Daniel Farson’s The Man Who Wrote
Dracula: A Biography of Bram Stoker (1975), Phyllis A. Roth’s Bram Stoker
(1982), Barbara Belford’s Bram Stoker: A Biography of the Author of Dracula
(1996), and Paul Murray’s From the Shadow of Dracula: A Life of Bram Stoker
(2004).7
Contemporary Stokerian biographers have acknowledged and continuously
return to the possibility that Stoker was a closeted homosexual who was in love
with Irving. Through the years, life-writers become progressively audacious in
their discussions of Stoker’s same-sex desire; less recent biographies naturally
approach this topic with caution. Farson, for instance, focuses more or less on
Stoker’s heterosexual behavior, since sexual ambiguity was not a topic that biog-
raphers felt as comfortable discussing in the 1970s as they do today. Nevertheless,
he often insinuates that Stoker might have been interested in men. For instance,
he begins his chapter entitled “The Sexual Impulse” with the telling statement “It
was a great friendship,” referring to Stoker and Irving (Farson 1975: 203). Roth
further engages with this topic in a more direct manner, noting that “Stoker’s
friendship with Irving was the most important love relationship of his adult life”
(1982: 136). Belford is even more straightforward about the issue, and remarks
that “The Beefsteak Room,” which Stoker frequented, was a “‘homosocial’world
of masculine privilege in which women were used as pawns” and where there
was evidence of “the shadow of homosexuality” (1996: 127).8
Murray is equally
forthright, declaring that “[h]omosexuality on Stoker’s part could have been [...]
[a] reason for discontinuation of heterosexual relations with Florence” (2004:
80). To be sure, there is a progressive desire on the part of biographers to address
the topic of Stoker’s ambiguous sexuality, and the more current the biographer,
the more likely they are to advance the possibility that Stoker was a closeted
person. Due to this “evidence,” biographers would no doubt agree with the idea
that, as a biographical subject, Stoker might be examined within a homosocial
framework.
In biography, Stoker is arguably depicted as one who, among other things, ex-
perienced “homosocial desire” for his friend and employer Henry Irving. Because
of the fact that his true feelings were never fully expressed and have remained
shrouded in mystery, Stoker’s obscure sex life has been a continuous source of
speculation for biographers. One explanation as to why the author’s most inti-
mate thoughts and desires generate such interest is that he belongs to an exclusive
class of educated bourgeois males who distinguished themselves in various ways
during the late-Victorian period. As Sedgwick observes, “Biographies of Eng-
lish gentlemen of the nineteenth and early twentieth century are full of oddities,
6. 46 Brigitte Boudreau
surprises, and apparent false starts; they seem to have no pre-determined sexual
trajectory” (1985: 173).9
To be sure, Stoker’s elusive “sexual trajectory” has gen-
erated many hypotheses indeed. Moreover, Stoker was acquainted with many of
the well-known figures of the fin de siècle literary scene, including, as aforemen-
tioned, Oscar Wilde.10
Stoker had a particularly interesting affiliation with Wilde,
as he won the heart and hand of Wilde’s former sweetheart, Florence Balcombe
(Belford 1996: 85).11
Despite his compliance with Victorian heterosexual norms
through marriage, Stoker’s sexual identity remains elusive.
Bram Stoker’s “Primal Scenes”: Personal Reminiscences and Dracula
It is precisely this aura of sexual unsteadiness that Stokerian biographers seek
to expose, by discussing episodes throughout their subject’s life that may be re-
ferred to as “primal scenes.”12
For instance, it may be argued that biographers
present the seemingly insignificant recital of Thomas Hood’s ballad The Dream
of Eugene Aram, The Murderer13
as indicative of a life-altering “primal scene” for
Stoker, since it marks the date of his first official encounter with Irving. Stokerian
biographers look to Personal Reminiscences, where Stoker reveals, in his own
words, the impact Irving had upon him on the rainy December night in 1876
when they first met. Life-writers focus on Irving’s recital, found in Book I of
Personal Reminiscences, which he delivered with great emotion, calling it a “pre-
sent” for Stoker, his newfound friend. Farson calls the groundbreaking event
“The Fateful Meeting” (1975: 23), and goes into detail about what happened on
that particular evening. Roth also mentions this crucial episode in the introduc-
tion and conclusion of her biography. Belford further highlights this watershed
moment in her chapter entitled “Henry Irving” (1996: 70). Finally, for Murray,
too, Stoker’s reaction to the poem is a vital turning point in the author’s life that
he deems worthy of mention (2004: 71).
Stoker’s significant reaction to the poetry recital helps to piece together the
magnitude of the impact it had upon the author’s life. In his own words, the au-
thor recalls that “[s]o great was the magnetism of his genius, so profound was the
sense of his dominancy that I sat spellbound [...] [and] I burst out into something
like a violent fit of hysterics” (Stoker 1906: I, 29–31). Stoker’s admission that
he experienced “a violent fit of hysterics” as a reaction to another man’s poetry
recital has naturally generated great interest and much speculation among the au-
thor’s life-writers. To add fuel to the fire, Stoker seemingly felt the need to defend
his erratic behavior, as he underscores later in Book I of Personal Reminiscences:
“I was no hysterical subject. I was no green youth; no weak individual, yielding to
a superior emotional force. I was as men go a strong man, strong in many ways”
(Stoker 1906: I, 31). Stoker’s vehement denial that he was “no hysterical subject”
seems to have effectively worked against him, and not only built a stronger case
for the theory of his homoerotic desire for Irving, but also and perhaps more
importantly gestures towards the idea of female hysteria in Victorian England.14
7. 47Libidinal Life: Bram Stoker, Homosocial Desire
In The Female Malady: Women, Madness, and English Culture, 1830–1980,
Elaine Showalter indicates that hysteria was largely considered a female illness15
in Stoker’s day, making it a rather dangerous avowal for a Victorian gentleman.
The question that remains, of course, is whether Stoker was fully conscious of
what he might be implying. Murray believes that, when his biographical subject
wrote Personal Reminiscences, he was not ignorant of the implications of his
statement: “Jean-Martin Charcot, of whom Stoker was well aware by the time he
wrote Personal Reminiscences, saw hysteria as a disorder suffered by women or
very impressionable men who were ‘well-developed, not enervated by an indo-
lent or too studious mode of life’” (2004: 73). Clearly, Murray and others contend
that the author – a worldly fin de siècle fellow – should have known better than to
publically confess to suffering from a feminine illness.
Stoker further reveals that the evening of the poetry recital marked the begin-
ning of a deeply spiritual bond between Irving and himself, one that seemingly
elevated him to a higher plane of existence. Indeed, he reveals once again in
Personal Reminiscences that “soul had looked into soul! From that hour began
a friendship as profound, as close, as lasting as can be between two men” (Stoker
1906: I, 33). Stoker then goes on to pontificate that at “the sight of his [Irving’s]
picture before me, with those loving words, the record of a time of deep emotion
and full understanding of us both, each for the other, unmans me once again as
I write” (1906: I, 33, emphasis mine). Stoker’s telling word-choice here displays
that his bout of hysteria was not an isolated incident; but rather indicates how he
repeatedly describes himself in feminine terms. Like the aforementioned admis-
sion of hysteria, this passage has likewise been interpreted by many biographers
as a declaration of same-sex desire. These bizarre disclosures on Stoker’s part
have been interpreted by many as a form of confirmation that he harbored secret
desires for his friend, and certainly serves as valuable primary material for Stok-
er’s life-writers. Moreover, by professing that he “was no green youth; no weak
individual,” Stoker effectively implies that feeble women, rather than stalwart
males, were typically subject to hysteria. Despite this, the author still admits to
having felt the onset of hysterics in Personal Reminiscences, thereby indicating
to his readership the extent of Irving’s colossal impact upon him. What is made
clear is that Personal Reminiscences contains many autobiographical statements
on some of Stoker’s most personal experiences. Instead of suffering from male
hysteria,16
biographers posit that it is much more plausible that Stoker’s emo-
tional turbulence reflected deep-seeded feelings of homosocial/homoerotic de-
sire. Stoker purportedly maintained a heteronormative façade in his day-to-day
existence, yet contemporary examinations of his life have recently unveiled the
author’s sexually ambiguous underbelly.
Moreover, Stoker’s momentary mental breakdown, as recorded in Personal
Reminiscences, demonstrates the Victorian taboo against a male’s outward ex-
pression of passionate sentiments, which Sedgwick might accordingly describe
as the “oppressive of the so-called feminine in men” (Sedgwick 1985: 20). The
incident of Irving’s poetry recital and the consequent impression it left upon the
8. 48 Brigitte Boudreau
author arguably serves to centralize the biographical narratives of many Stoke-
rian life-writers. Although Stoker apparently felt the need to belittle the signifi-
cance of his excessive display of ardor as a temporary bout of weakness, his
attempt at doing so had the unintentional effect of further highlighting its import
for biographers. As Farson points out, Stoker “stressed his physical strength, not
in his vindication but in praise of Irving’s ‘splendid power’which had moved him
so greatly” (1975: 30). Roth further notes that after this confession, Stoker “feels
the need to qualify his reaction with one of the longest autobiographical state-
ments in Personal Reminiscences, a statement in which he describes [...] his great
psychological and physical strength as an adult” (1982: 132–33). In other words,
Stoker confirms that he is both masculine and mature. However, Belford sees
Stoker’s rant as over-compensatory, and pictures him instead as remarkably juve-
nile: “[H]e had an impressionable disposition [...] Irving had on this evening in-
truded on Stoker’s immaturity” (1996: 74). In essence, the pivotal “primal scene”
of Stoker’s biographical life arguably centers around Irving’s poetry recital, and
further illustrates how the author’s peculiar confession is interpreted as symbolic
of his quarter-century relationship with Irving. The episode further informs the
shape that Stoker’s life would henceforth take, and the Stokerian biographies
under investigation stress that the obsessive admiration he felt for Irving on the
night of the poetry recital would forever enslave him. Indeed, this key incident
in Personal Reminiscences provides major support in constructing the man who
wrote Dracula as a sexually elusive figure whom biographers tirelessly examine
as the secret admirer of Henry Irving.
This life-altering “primal scene” of the poetry recital aside, other key moments
in the Stoker-Irving saga further reinforce the biographical construction of the
author as sexually elusive. Later in Personal Reminiscences, for instance, Stoker
goes so far as to use marital imagery to convey the depth of his bond with Irving:
Irving and I were so much together that after a few years we could almost
read a thought of the other; we could certainly read a glance or an expres-
sion. I have sometimes seen the same capacity in a husband and wife
who have lived together for long and who are good friends, accustomed
to work together and to understand each other.
(1906: I, 364, emphasis mine)
Here, Stoker envisions Irving as a spouse, an assertion that has not been lost on
the author’s biographers. In addition to what may be considered a declaration of
love by many critics, the passage further reveals that Irving clearly holds power
over Stoker. Biographers have likewise examined other sources besides Personal
Reminiscences, such as notebooks and letters by the author, which point to evidence
of same-sex love between men. Murray notes that long before his relationship
with Irving began, Stoker described himself in one of his notebooks in 1871 as
“a strong man with a woman’s heart and the wishes of a lonely child” (2004: 65).
Such statements and countless others continue to mystify the author’s life-writers.
9. 49Libidinal Life: Bram Stoker, Homosocial Desire
In analyzing Stoker’s assertions with regards to Irving, biographers tend to
depict the relationship between the two men as beset by inequality. Although
Stoker desired more than anything to form a partnership based on mutual re-
spect, he is, instead, portrayed in biography as a man who was subservient to
the overbearing Irving. As Murray explains: “Stoker’s relationship with Irving
had undergone a sea of change [...] from close friendship to that of a subordi-
nate to a superior” (2004: 101). Indeed, the nature of the union was such that
Stoker called Irving “Chief” and “Guv’nor” (Belford 1996: 100). The Anglo-
Irish writer is depicted as somewhat of an inferior type, a man whose career
was defined by a life of obedience to the imperious actor. Belford confirms this
characterization, stating that Irving was to adopt “an evil parental role [in re-
lation to Stoker], the most felicitous ever written for him” (1996: 5). Belford
further holds that Irving not only controlled Stoker in a work environment, but
also compromised the relationships with his kith and kin. Indeed, she contends
that Irving “stole away Stoker’s family life. But Stoker was a willing victim; he
much preferred Irving’s company to an evening in front of the fire with Florence
cradling their newborn” (Belford 1996: 121).17
The author of Dracula is thus
arguably presented by biographers as a man who was so dedicated to his em-
ployer that he neglected his family.
To be sure, the Irving/Stoker relationship has been constructed in biogra-
phy as what Sedgwick might refer to as a “hypercharged and hyperarticulated
paternalis[tic] [...] bond between male servant and male employer” (1985: 162).
The idea of Stoker as a “male servant” may certainly apply to the man behind
Dracula, such was the extent of his dedication to the actor. Stoker was not, how-
ever, the only drudge willing to worship Irving, a fact that is brought to the fore
once again in the Stokerian biographical project. Hopefuls for Stoker’s position
as acting manager and personal assistant to Irving abounded, and the likes of
Louis F. Austin were “insinuating [themselves] into Irving’s inner circle” (Bel-
ford 1996: 173). Stokerian biographers relate how their subject became jealous
of the attention Irving provided to his other comrades such as Austin, and how
the author reacted by “ignor[ing] [Austin] and thereby infuriated him” (Belford
1996: 174). Roth elaborates upon this point, highlighting that “Stoker’s relation-
ship with Irving was apparently not without its tensions and rivalries” (1982:
136). Farson adds that “Irving’s preference for Austin as his literary adviser must
have shaken any belief Bram had that he was indispensable” (1975: 86).Although
Stoker’s loyalty for Irving never swayed, Belford notes that his “infatuation with
men of power continued, doubtless aided by his growing insecurities over Ir-
ving’s affection” (1996: 189). Murray interprets the competition for Irving’s at-
tention differently, claiming that “Irving indulged his sardonic sense of humor by
fanning a sense of rivalry between Austin and Stoker” (2004: 104). Biographers
thus highlight the fact that Stoker often vied for Irving’s attention, and that his
hard work frequently went unnoticed by the actor.
After Irving’s passing in 1905, Stoker’s ostensible obsession with the actor did
not fade, but instead grew stronger, according to his biographers. Even though
10. 50 Brigitte Boudreau
Irving’s will contained “not even a small token of appreciation for Stoker” (Dorn
1997), he nevertheless produced his idolatrous biography of Irving in 1906, Per-
sonal Reminiscences. The work has, in turn, become a major source upon which
many writers rely for their own biographies of Stoker, since he often graces his
readers with autobiographical information throughout this two-volume opus. In-
deed, when the biography first appeared, one critic remarked that “in Mr. Bram
Stoker’s ‘Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving’ [...] there is a little too much
of Mr. Bram Stoker” (qtd. in Senf 1993: 137). Although personal information
about Stoker was seen as superfluous in the early years of the twentieth century,
it is viewed as providential for current Stokerian biographers. Indeed, first-hand
information from the subject or recollections in their own words are considered
extremely valuable for the modern biographical project, if not the most important
source of information.18
Stoker’s brief stint as a biographer has naturally been of great interest to con-
temporary Stokerian biographers themselves. Belford holds that Personal Remi-
niscences represents the author’s rather subjective account of Irving’s life story,
a recollection that reflects unabashed apotheosis. She calls the work “two vol-
umes of unobjective idolatry with occasional insights into himself, but he could
not (or would not) bring himself to look critically at the Irving legend, such was
his loyalty” (1996: 307). Belford further highlights the fact that Stoker goes so
far as to quote Elizabeth Barrett Browning to convey what he calls his feelings of
“heartbreaking sincerity” with regards to his memories of Irving (308). Naturally,
the fact that Stoker borrows from Browning – best remembered for her Sonnets
from the Portuguese – has yet again been viewed as symbolic. Reflecting upon
their relationship after Irving’s death, Stoker remembers the actor with reverence:
Looking back, I cannot honestly find any moment in my life when I failed
him, or when I put myself forward in any way [...] In my own speaking to
the dead man I can find an analogue in the words of heartbreaking sincerity
[of Mrs. Browning]:
Stand up on the jasper sea
And be witness I have given
All the gifts required of me!
(Stoker 1906: I, 34)
Stoker’s posthumous adulation of Irving, including the reference to the poem
“Bertha in the Lane,” not only recalls the equally emotional poetry recital of The
Dream of Eugene Aram, but has also been regarded as yet another piece of the
puzzle in the on-going construction of Stoker’s elusive sex life. Stokerians clearly
stress their subject’s deep admiration for Irving, and either imply or strongly sug-
gest that Stoker simply adored the actor. Farson, for instance, points out that Per-
sonal Reminiscences is a testament to their union: “‘Love’is not too strong a word
for the relationship that developed,” and which only terminated with death (1975:
11. 51Libidinal Life: Bram Stoker, Homosocial Desire
27, author’s emphasis). Roth adds that Personal Reminiscences “sustains the tone
of deeply affectionate respect and unqualified admiration which marked Stoker’s
feelings for the man he served so devotedly” (1982: 18–19). This slave-like dedi-
cation was to be Stoker’s destiny in Murray’s point of view: “It was Stoker’s fate
to be associated with Henry Irving for the rest of his life” (2004: 237). Indeed, in
his 1912 obituary, Stoker’s greatest literary achievement was ironically said to be
Personal Reminiscences, rather than his now legendary vampire tale.
Despite his numerous declarations with regards to Irving, it must be remem-
bered that Stoker never provided unequivocal proof of his same-sex desire, the
way Oscar Wilde did, for instance. Nevertheless, biographers suggest that he
might have experienced passionate feelings for the actor that he was too afraid
to express. Naturally, Stoker was well aware of Victorian “scientific models [...]
[which] identified (or constructed as deviant) ‘aberrant’ sexual practices [...]
such as homosexuality” (Smith 2004: 99); thus, it has been theorized that this
persuaded the author to keep his deepest desires in check. The construction of
Stoker as a man who supposedly experienced secret same-sex desires relates to
the Sedgwickian idea of “closetedness,” which is said to represent “the relations
of the known and the unknown, the explicit and the inexplicit around [the] homo/
heterosexual definition” (1990: 3). Certainly, the unknown aspects of the Stoker-
Irving relationship add to the mystique and intrigue surrounding this elusive au-
thor. This, in turn, contributes to Stoker’s creation as a fascinating biographical
subject, since the shroud of sexual mystique surrounding him ultimately helps
ensure that his biographies become appealing to mass audiences. It is evident that
sexuality plays a major part in the biographical construction of the subject, and in
Stoker’s case in particular. Marjorie Gaber suggests that an interesting libidinal
history “is one presumptive reason why the book is being purchased, reviewed,
read, or in fact written” (1996: 22). Certainly, the Stokerian biographical project
has gone through great pains to unveil the mysteries that surround the sex life of
the man who wrote Dracula, yet there are still many unknowns. In short, Stoker’s
elusive sexual trajectory can be examined through his memoir Personal Remi-
niscences, and his biographers explore this revealing work when recounting the
author’s life-story in relation to Irving. Stoker’s fiction, and Dracula in particular,
can likewise be read as autobiographical, and Stokerian life-writers have also
engaged in numerous readings of this vampire text in order to better understand
the nature of the relationship between Stoker and Irving.
Without a doubt, biographers unanimously agree that Dracula is a largely au-
tobiographical work, and that key individuals in the author’s life are represented
as significant characters within the text.19
Some hold that the novel can be under-
stood as a window into the obscure sex life of its author, similarly to Personal
Reminiscences. Belford has gone so far as to claim that Stoker “dumped the sign-
posts of his life into a supernatural cauldron and called it Dracula” (1996: 256).
Moreover, Jeffrey Jerome Cohen sees Irving as Stoker’s muse, noting that “we
might explore the foreign count’s transgressive but compelling sexuality, as sub-
tly alluring to Jonathan Harker as Henry Irving, Stoker’s mentor, was to Stoker”
12. 52 Brigitte Boudreau
(1996: 5). To be sure, Irving’s importance in Stoker’s life cannot be overlooked,
and his mystifying liaison with the author may be explored within the context of
Stoker’s well-known vampire tale.
Dracula is certainly Stoker’s most famous work, and elements of unfixed sex-
uality and unstable gender roles can be found throughout the text. Here, Stoke-
rian biographers point out that not only have Stoker’s characters become sexual-
ized but, as in the case with Personal Reminiscences, the author himself has also
incited speculation with regards to his seemingly unfixed sexuality. Moreover,
Sedgwick’s concept of homosocial desire may certainly be applied to a reading of
the novel, since she sees the Gothic novel as particularly effective in relaying this
idea. Indeed, she highlights that “[t]he paranoid Gothic was the novelistic tradi-
tion in which the routing through women of male homosocial desire had the most
perfunctory presence” (1985: 118). Certainly, Stoker’s Dracula may arguably fall
within this category, as an example of a late-Victorian “paranoid Gothic” text.
Examined from the point of view of Stoker’s fiction, Irving is considered by
many Stokerians and Dracula scholars alike to be the central model for the father of
all vampires (Murray 2004: 177). Bearing in mind Irving’s paramount importance
upon Stoker’s writings, many biographers agree that reading Dracula potentially
yields autobiographical findings about Stoker, more particularly about how he
regarded Irving. In chapter two of Dracula, for instance, Jonathan Harker tells of
his first meeting with the Count.20
The latter’s physical description is recounted
with meticulous attention to detail, as he is portrayed as a strikingly “tall old
man, clean shaven save for a long white moustache, and clad in black from head
to foot” (Stoker 2008: 42). In addition, he has a distinctive face, with “a strong
a very strong – aquiline, with high bridge of the thin nose” (Stoker 2008: 44). As
Belford observes, his countenance in some ways resembles Irving’s noticeably aq-
uiline features (1996: 239).21
Similarly, Irving is said to have been a rather eccentric
figure that “defied description” and who possessed “an incomparable power for
eeriness” (Belford 1996: 71). Roth also notes that the similarities between Irving
and Dracula were so great that Stoker might have written the work “expressly to
be performed by Henry Irving” (1982: 136). However, Murray is convinced that
the similarities between the two are more psychological in nature, noting that “the
case for seeing Irving as Dracula [...] is based largely on [...] an alleged feeling on
Stoker’s part [...] that he was exploited by the actor” (2004: 177). Belford reiterates
this point, adding that Dracula became “a sinister caricature of Irving as a mesmerist
and a depleter, an artist draining those about him to feed his ego” (1996: 270). As
such, biographers and critics largely agree that Stoker’s most famous work contains
important autobiographical information, with allusions to Irving as a physically
and mentally overbearing figure, much like the Count himself.
A brief autobiographical examination of Stoker’s novel, more specifically an
exploration of the apparent tension represented between Jonathan and Dracula,
may reveal some of Stoker’s deepest feelings towards Henry Irving. It has been
suggested that the character of Jonathan Harker is meant to represents Stoker –
“Stoker’s alter ego,” according to Belford – and that Irving stands for the evil
13. 53Libidinal Life: Bram Stoker, Homosocial Desire
Count Dracula, as aforementioned. In Stoker’s work, the Count threatens to de-
stroy Jonathan’s fragile mental state, just as he has Renfield’s before him. When
Jonathan enters Castle Dracula, he soon loses his grip on power, and effectively
becomes the vampire’s prisoner. For biographers, the most significant “primal
scene” from an autobiographical perspective consists in the moment where Drac-
ula intercepts the weird sisters and saves Jonathan from their deadly embrace.22
Belford views the episode as “Stoker’s most revealing scene from a biographical
point of view” (1996: 7). Here, demonic women prepare to attack the helpless
Englishman, who has succumbed to their lustful appetites. Just before they pro-
ceed with their fatal kiss, Dracula violently interrupts them, claiming Jonathan as
his own:
I [Jonathan] was conscious of the presence of the Count, and of his being
as if lapped in a storm of fury [...] His eyes were positively blazing. The
red light in them was lurid, as if the flames of hell fire blazed behind them.
His face was deathly pale, and the lines of it were hard like drawn wires.
The thick eyebrows that met over the nose now seemed like a heaving bar
of white-hot metal. With a fierce sweep of his arm, he hurled the woman
from him, and then motioned to the others, as though he were beating
them back. It was the same imperious gesture that I had seen used to the
wolves. In a voice which, though low and almost in a whisper seemed
to cut through the air and then ring in the room he said, “How dare you
touch him, any of you? How dare you cast eyes on him when I had for-
bidden it? Back, I tell you all! This man belongs to me! Beware how you
meddle with him, or you’ll have to deal with me.”
(Stoker 2008: 81–82, emphasis mine)
Belford reads this scene – especially when Dracula declares: “This man belongs
to me!” – as the Victorian male fear that “Dracula will seduce, penetrate (with
his phallic shaped canine teeth), and drain another male [...] Nowhere in the nov-
el is Irving’s mesmeric control over Stoker more manifest” (1996: 7). Without
a doubt, such examples display how biographers hone in on specific episodes in
Stoker’s best-known work to uncover his possible subversive desire for Irving.
Viewed from a Sedgwickian perspective, it is clear that one of the world’s most
famous horror tales could be said to gesture towards the concept of male homo-
social desire, a claim that several biographers have readily made. Sedgwick’s
understanding of “homosocial desire” is once again an appropriate lens through
which to examine at the life of the author of Dracula, considering the tumul-
tuous relationship he shared with the famed actor Henry Irving. The notion of
“homosocial desire,” thus, not only addresses the possibility of male romance,
but as James Eli Adams indicates, is, in a more general sense, a concept that is
“central to social power [...] traditionally almost every social structure [...] locates
power in some form of bond between men” (1999: 134). In short, the notion of
homosocial desire and the possibility of same-sex love can be applied to an au-
14. 54 Brigitte Boudreau
tobiographical reading of Personal Reminiscences as well as Dracula. Though
biographers admittedly present the mysterious liaison between Stoker and Irving
from “various angles of vision, so that their subject, instead of being flattened out,
attains a three-dimensional quality” (Edel 1959: 152), they nevertheless focus
extensively on the idea of unfixed sexuality in the life of the author of Dracula.
This paper has examined the biographical construction of the historical Bram
Stoker as a sexually elusive figure. Stokerian biographers often rely upon the au-
thor’s own works, such as his little-known biography of Henry Irving, Personal
Reminiscences of Henry Irving as well as his gothic novel, Dracula, in their at-
tempts to reconstruct the life of this little-known author. Of late, the Stokerian
biographical project has advanced various theories concerning Stoker’s sexuality,
displaying the extent to which the author’s fiction and life-history have been ab-
sorbed together into Dracula’s “dense narrative whirlpool” (Davison 1997: 148).
By exploring the figure of Bram Stoker through his “autobiographical” texts,
many life-writers have deduced that the author harbored illicit desires that he
may – or may not – have acted upon. Biographers generally agree that the life
of Bram Stoker is rendered comprehensible through his relationship with Henry
Irving, a figure that remains crucial to the full understanding and appreciation of
Dracula. Indeed, Daniel Farson, Phyllis A. Roth, Barbara Belford and Paul Mur-
ray all reveal that Irving had a central role in shaping Stoker’s life and literary
career, but that he was also forever cast as Irving’s subordinate. Viewed in light
of the homosocial world of Victorian England, Stoker has led biographers to pon-
tificate about his seemingly ambiguous sexuality, a topic that dated Stokerians
have hinted at and which more recent biographers have openly acknowledged. In
light of this, Sedgwick’s notion of “homosocial desire” provides a useful theo-
retical framework to help situate a biographical analysis of the historical Stoker.
Since much scholarly debate surrounding Stoker’s sexuality exists, the case has
yet to be closed. By unearthing the man behind the vampire through the study
of his very own works, Stokerians have effectively brought their subject back to
life for readers today. Yet in a post-Freudian world where everything is sexually
symbolic, perhaps the image that biography has wove of Bram Stoker says as
much about the author as it does about our own libidinal culture. Because Stoker
is such an elusive biographical subject, it often seems like we are left, like Jona-
than at the closing of Dracula, with “hardly one authentic document; nothing but
a mass of type-writing” (Stoker 2008: 500). Although it is difficult at times to
piece together a life story, it is nevertheless a valid and commendable endeavor.
Biographers underline that theirs is an art open to interpretation; a portrait of
the artist, rather than an exact reproduction. Paula R. Backscheider drives home
this point: “[B]iography is more interesting today because of the acknowledge-
ment that the portrayal of an individual is not the only possible one” (2002: 228).
I maintain that the theories surrounding Stoker’s libidinal life are well-grounded,
and that much has been uncovered on the life of this elusive author. However, the
father of the modern vampire remains obscure to this day, with many questions
left unanswered. Biographical studies concerned with the life and times of Bram
15. 55Libidinal Life: Bram Stoker, Homosocial Desire
Stoker can certainly expect further research on the twinning of this Anglo-Irish
writer with the actor Henry Irving, as the two seemed destined to be joined to-
gether for all eternity.
Notes
1
Although Queen Victoria did, in fact, acknowledge same-sex relations between men, she
could hardly fathom the notion of erotic love between women, infamously claiming that
“No woman would ever do that” when it was brought to her attention (qtd. in Ettorre 1980:
198). Elizabeth Ettorre notes that “Queen Victoria would not believe that it could ever exist.
After the passage of the Criminal Law Amendment Bill in 1885 (making homosexual acts
between adults punishable by law), Queen Victoria refused to sign the Bill until all references
to women were deleted. Lesbianism was unthinkable to the Queen!” (198). In a way, female
same-sex love was, for the Victorians, even more abominable than homosexual love between
men, since the Queen herself refused to acknowledge its very existence. Same-sex love
between women truly was “the love that dare not speak its name.”
2 The connection between the homosocial/homosexual undertones in Dracula and the trial of
Oscar Wilde has previously been explored by Talia Schaffer, among others, who underlines
that the homosexual inklings in Stoker’s famous Gothic tale may be traced back to the author’s
life-history, and in particular to the individuals in his own authorial circle. In “‘AWilde Desire
Took Me’: The Homoerotic History of Dracula,” Schaffer posits that “Dracula explores
Stoker’s fear and anxiety as a closeted homosexual man during Oscar Wilde’s trial [...]
[Dracula’s] peculiar tonality of horror derives from Stoker’s emotions at this unique moment
in gay history” (1994: 381). The “birth” of the homosexual is certainly relevant to the study
of the man who was Bram Stoker, yet many critics are left with more questions than answers
with regards to the sex life of the author of Dracula. All can unanimously agree, however,
that the trial of Oscar Wilde ushered in the idea of the “homosexual” as a label or identity,
rather than simply an illegal act. The trial further placed the issue of same-sex love into the
spotlight, and soon thereafter homosexuality entered into the “collective consciousness” of
Western thought.
3 Prior to the Victorian era, intimate same-sex relations were largely perceived as abominable
acts against oneself and God. In the late eighteenth century, for instance, Immanuel Kant
(1724–1804), one of the most prominent and influential philosophers of his age, held that
the body became objectified if utilized to satisfy sexual impulses, and specifically addressed
the issue of same-sex relations in “Of Crimina Carnis,” where he described such deeds as
“crimen carnis contra naturam,” or “carnal crimes against nature.” He outlined that
[Among] the crimina carnis contra naturam is intercourse sexus homogenii, where the
object of sexual inclination continues, indeed, to be human, but is changed since the
sexual congress is not heterogeneous but homogeneous, i.e., when a woman satisfies her
impulse on a woman, or a man on a man. This also runs counter to the ends of humanity,
for the end of humanity in regard to this impulse is to preserve the species without
forfeiture of the person; but by this practice I by no means preserve the species, which
can still be done through a crimen carnis contra naturam, only that there I again forfeit
my person, and so degrade myself below the beasts, and dishonour humanity. (2001: 161)
As this excerpt displays, the vilification of same-sex desire was not only, much later, a reality
of everyday Victorian life, but was an integral part of Western philosophy for centuries.
4 If we take his word at face value, Stoker did not intend his audience to interpret Dracula as
a work of licentious Gothic fiction. In a letter to a friend, William Gladstone, Stoker claimed,
in 1897, “there is nothing base in this book [Dracula]” (1999: 48). Like Kant, Stoker
16. 56 Brigitte Boudreau
considers “base” instincts to include carnal desires, and he reveals later, in his 1908 essay
“The Censorship of Fiction,” that texts which contains sexually explicit material should be
censored:
There exists a censorship of a kind, but it is crude and coarse and clumsy, and difficult
of operation – the police. No one could wish an art so fine as literature, with a spirit as
subtle and evanescent as oenanthic ether [...] put under the repressive measures carried
out by coarse officials. But it is the coarseness and unscrupulousness of certain writers
of fiction which has brought the evil; on their heads be it. (2002: 161)
Stoker further notes that libidinal literature is detrimental to society and, in particular, for
Britain’s youths, and goes so far as to suggest that such works be outlawed.
5 In 1878, Stoker left Dublin for London, in order to take the position of manager of the
Lyceum Theatre for Henry Irving. Stoker held this post for the next twenty-seven years, and
served Irving with extreme loyalty and devotion until the actor’s death in 1905 (Dorn 1997).
6 In December 1876, Stoker was invited to Irving’s private recital of the ballad The Dream
of Eugene Aram by Thomas Hood, and was thereafter devoted to the actor (but only began
officially working for him two years later, in 1878) (Belford 1996: 72).
7 Tangentially, these biographers explain that they all have unique “relationships” with their
biographical subject. Roth reveals in Bram Stoker that her mission is to bring the figure of
Stoker to the fore, claiming that “Stoker remains ignored and unknown despite Dracula”
(1982: iii). In Bram Stoker: A Biography of the Author of Dracula, Belford, who claims to
feel connected to her subject, reveals that Stoker eventually became her “friend,” whom
she characterizes as “witty but sad, rigid but responsible, immature but loving” (1996: xv).
In Murray’s From the Shadow of Dracula: A Life of Bram Stoker, the author pinpoints
similarities between Stoker and himself, and states that his alma mater, like Stoker’s, is
Trinity College, and that his love of horror tales was ignited at a young age, as was Stoker’s
(2004: xi). What is therefore made clear from the outset is that “identification is no longer
seen as a danger [...] in the biographer’s relationship with his or her subject” (Peters 1995:
45). Although all of these biographers desire to convey that their lives are tightly intertwined
with Stoker’s, only Farson has blood ties; Stoker was his great-uncle. This Canadian-born
biographer is also the most famous of the Stokerians, as he gained recognition in the 1950s
and 1960s as a BBC broadcaster and writer. Farson was also openly homosexual, which he
discusses at length in his own 1997 autobiography, Never a Normal Man.
8 Belford borrows the expression “the shadow of homosexuality” from Elaine Showalter’s
discussion of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde in her work Sexual Anarchy: Gender and Culture at
the Fin de Siècle, where she elaborates that “the shadow of homosexuality that surrounded
Clubland and the nearly hysterical terror of revealing forbidden emotions between men [...]
constituted the dark side of patriarchy” (1990: 107). Belford is therefore careful only to
suggest – rather than to conclude beyond the shadow of a doubt – that Stoker was a closeted
homosexual.
9 Sedgwick further mentions Henry James as the quintessential Victorian bachelor whose
sexuality has been the source of much debate. Garnishing considerably more literary attention
than Stoker, Henry James’s rather mysterious “sexual trajectory” has become an area of
interest in both academic and creative writing circles. Leon Edel’s watershed biographical
work on James left out possible indications of the author’s homosexual relations, and caused
Edel to experience an “ethical crisis” over the matter. Linda Simon underlines that “[a]lthough
Edel allowed for homoeroticism, he refused to consider the possibility of homosexuality,
which did not fit the identity of the Henry James whom Edel had created” (2007: 72).
10 Stoker met Wilde at university. Wilde encouraged him to join the university’s Philosophical
Society while he was its president. Stoker’s private thoughts concerning the infamous Wilde
trial and the ensuing scandal are ultimately unknown (Belford 1996: 246).
11 The Wilde/Balcombe/Stoker love triangle has been of great scholarly interest to Belford in
17. 57Libidinal Life: Bram Stoker, Homosocial Desire
particular. Belford reveals that Balcombe was, in her youth, a famed Victorian beauty and
that she left Wilde when Stoker began to pursue her, to the former’s great dismay. Wilde
wrote to her after their split requesting that she return the gifts he had given her during their
courtship (Belford 1996: 85).
12 Indeed, the Stokerian biographical narratives under study are arguably grounded in a “scenic
method of composition,” which may be considered narrative “primal scenes.” This Freudian
concept of childhood trauma, which explains peculiar behaviors later in life, can be employed
as a model to uncover the turning points of a biographical subject’s life. In Primal Scenes:
Literature, Philosophy, Psychoanalysis, Ned Lukacher observes that the concept of the
primal scene “should not be constricted to the conventional psychoanalytic understanding
of the term” and does not necessarily occur at one particular moment during childhood as
Freud contends (1986: 24). Lukacher further underlines that “[t]he primal scene is always
the primal scene of words [...] [and that it] is always constructed from what the analyst-
critic hears or reads in the discourse of the patient-text” (68). As such, the primal scene
often involves verbal pronouncements that are considered life-changing for the subject that
experiences them.
13 Thomas Hood’s ballad The Dream of Eugene Aram revolves around the story of Aram, who
robs and kills an old man for his riches. Stoker witnessed Irving embody the character of
the murderous Aram, and at the end of the reading, Stoker was so moved that he reportedly
became hysterical (Belford 1996: 74).
14 Michel Foucault’s groundbreaking work A History of Sexuality addresses the perception of
hysteria in nineteenth-century Britain. Foucault notes that the Victorians categorized certain
individuals into sexually deviant groupings, one of them significantly being “the hysterical
woman” (1976: 105).
15 In the nineteenth century, when a woman went against social conventions, she was often
diagnosed as a hysteric. Hysteria was largely perceived to be a female affliction. Showalter
further reveals that even women who abided by social norms could be unexpectedly
pronounced “mad,” thus offering “the second sex” “no protection against [accusations of]
hysteria” (1987: 147). In Stokerian fiction, sexual promiscuity in women is often indicative
of hysteria.
16 Conversely, Juliet Mitchell notes in Mad Men and Medusas that “Freud had enthusiastically
espoused the propositions of male hysteria following his study visit in 1885 to the Salpêtrière
hospital in Paris where Jean Martin Charcot had been demonstrating the hysterical behavior
of both male and female patients” (2001: 59). As such, overly sensitive men could, in rare
cases, be diagnosed with hysteria.
17 To be sure, Stoker served Irving so devotedly that he ultimately sacrificed and neglected his
own family. Stoker’s only child Irving Noel Thornley Stoker – who was naturally named
after Irving – openly resented Irving for robbing his father away from him (Belford 1996:
121). As such, it appears that Stoker was more devoted to Irving than he was to his own son,
a fact that biographers once again regard as evidence of Stoker’s romantic interest in the
famous actor.
18 Michael Benton adds that “[s]ome texts will reflect an emphasis upon documentary
information about a life, others upon the narrative shape that gives coherence to a life” (2009:
37). In Stoker’s case, his biography of Henry Irving, Personal Reminiscences, has served as
a primary biographical source, as aforementioned.
19 Stoker’s mother, Charlotte Thornley Stoker, is one such individual. As Belford recounts,
Charlotte had a significant formative role in shaping her son’s literary career. In the first seven
years of Stoker’s life when he was bed-ridden, his mother entertained him with Irish folk tales
as well as true horror stories of her survival of the 1832 cholera epidemic in Sligo, Ireland.
Stoker loved her stories so much that he asked her to put them into writing. These stories had
a profound impact upon Stoker, and Belford contends that, on some level, he connected the
tales of hardship with his own debilitating physical condition (1996: 18). Joseph Valente, author
of Dracula’s Crypt: Bram Stoker, Irishness, and the Question of Blood, reiterates this point:
18. 58 Brigitte Boudreau
“Stoker’s transferential identification with his mother’s life-history was probably heightened
[...] by the belief that his disabling childhood illness had resulted from contagion following in
the potato famine’s wake” (2002: 16). Some of these stories included how Charlotte “heard the
banshee cry when her mother died; of how some during the famine drank blood from the veins
of cattle, including the family cow” (Belford 1996: 18). Belford holds that Stoker’s mother
“provided the flamboyant genes” and was a source of inspiration for her son long after her
story-telling days were over. She was also Stoker’s greatest Dracula fan, calling it “splendid”
and predicting that “it should make a widespread reputation and much money for you” (Belford
1996: 274). In Dracula, the “good” mother figure has been associated with Charlotte. Belford
contends that she informs the character of “the brave and loyal Mina,” especially since Dracula
is Stoker’s most autobiographical work (1996: 5). Biographers therefore make it clear that
Stoker’s mother “haunts his writing” (Belford 1996: 28).
20 More specifically, Jonathan describes his first encounter with Dracula in his journal entry on
May 5th
.
21 Though I wish to highlight the similarities between the Count and Irving here, it should be
noted that Dracula is also depicted as repulsive and animalesque with “peculiarly arched
nostrils and hair growing scantily round the temples but profusely elsewhere” (Stoker 2008:
44). Further, the vampire’s mouth is “fixed and rather and cruel-looking, with peculiarly
sharp white teeth; these protruded over the lips [...] his breath was rank [...] a horrible feeling
of nausea came over me [...]” (44–47). Jonathan further observes that “there were hairs in
the centre of the palm” (47), a trait commonly associated with masturbation in accordance
with nineteenth-century degeneration theory as well as criminal anthropology. It is, thus,
important to remember that not all of the passages describing the Count reflect an accurate
portrait of the real-life Irving.
22 More specifically, Jonathan recounts this occurrence in chapter three of his journal.
References
Adams, James Eli (1999) ‘Victorian Sexualities’. In: Tucker, Herbert F. (ed.) A Companion to Vic-
torian Literature & Culture. Malden, MA: Blackwell. 125–138.
Arata, Stephen (1996) ‘Men at Work: From Heroic Friendship to Male Romance’. In: Fictions of
Loss in the Victorian Fin de Siècle: Identity and Empire. Ed. Stephen Arata. Cambridge: Cam-
bridge University Press. 79–104.
Backscheider, Paula R. (2002) Reflections on Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Belford, Barbara (1996) Bram Stoker: A Biography of the Author of Dracula. New York: Alfred
A. Knopf.
Benton, Michael (2009) Literary Biography: An Introduction. West Sussex: Blackwell.
Cohen, Jeffrey Jerome (1996) Monster Theory: Reading Culture. Minneapolis: University of Min-
nesota Press.
Davison, Carol Margaret (ed.) (1997) Bram Stoker’s Dracula: Sucking Through the Century, 1897–
1997. Toronto: Dundurn Press.
Dorn, Jennifer (1997) ‘The Literary World of Bram Stoker’. British Heritage 18(7). EBSCOhost.
Edel, Leon (1959) Literary Biography. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Ettorre, Elizabeth (1980) Lesbians, Women, and Society. New York: Routledge.
Farson, Daniel (1975) The Man Who Wrote Dracula: A Biography of Bram Stoker. London: Mi-
chael Joseph.
Farson, Daniel (1997) Never a Normal Man. Toronto: HarperCollins.
Foucault, Michel (1976) The History of Sexuality Vol. 1: The Will to Knowledge. London: Penguin.
Garber, Marjorie (1996) ‘Bisexuality and Celebrity’. In: Rhiel, Mary and David Bruce Suchoff
(eds.) The Seductions of Biography. New York: Routledge. 13–30.
Hood, Thomas (1831) The Dream of Eugene Aram, The Murderer. London: Charles Tilt.
19. 59Libidinal Life: Bram Stoker, Homosocial Desire
Kant, Immanuel (2001) ‘Of Crimina Carnis’. In: Heath, Peter and J. B. Schneewind (eds.) Lectures
on Ethics. Peter Heath (trans.) The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Immanuel Kant series.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 160–62.
Ludlam, Harry (1962) A Biography of Dracula: The Life Story of Bram Stoker. New York: Foulsh-
am.
Lukacher, Ned (1986) Primal Scenes: Literature, Philosophy, Psychoanalysis. Ithaca: Cornell Uni-
versity Press.
Mitchell, Juliet (2001) Mad Men and Medusas: Reclaiming Hysteria. New York: Basic Books.
Murray, Paul (2004) From the Shadow of Dracula: A Life of Bram Stoker. London: Jonathan Cape.
Peters, Catherine (1995) ‘Secondary Lives: Biography in Context’. In: Batchelor, John (ed.) The Art
of Literary Biography. Oxford: Clarendon Press. 43–56.
Roth, Phyllis A. (1982) Bram Stoker. Boston: Twayne.
Schaffer, Talia (1994) ‘“A Wilde Desire Took Me”: the Homoerotic History of Dracula’. ELH
61(2), 381–425.
Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky (1985) Between Men: English Literature and Homosexual Desire. New
York: Columbia University Press.
Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky (1990) Epistemology of the Closet. Berkeley: University of California
Press.
Senf, Carol A. (ed.) (1993), ‘The Drama: Mr. Stoker’s Irving’ [The Times 5 (1906): 353]. Rpt. in
The Critical Response to Bram Stoker. London: Greenwood Press.
Showalter, Elaine (1987) The Female Malady: Women, Madness and English Culture, 1830–1980.
London: Virago Press.
Showalter, Elaine (1990) Sexual Anarchy: Gender and Culture at the Fin de Siècle. New York:
Viking.
Simon, Linda (2007) The Critical Reception of Henry James: Creating a Master. New York: Cam-
den House.
Smith, Andrew (2004) Victorian Demons: Medicine, Masculinity and the Gothic at the Fin-de-
Siècle. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
Stoker, Bram (1975) The Annotated Dracula. Ed. Leonard Wolf. New York: Clarkson N. Potter.
Stoker, Bram (2002) ‘The Censorship of Fiction’. In: Dalby, Richard (ed.) A Glimpse of America
and other Lectures, Interviews and Essays. Essex: Desert Island Books. 154–61.
Stoker, Bram (1999) Letter to William Gladstone, 24 May 1897. Journal of Dracula Studies 1. 48.
Stoker, Bram (2008) The New Annotated Dracula. Ed. Leslie S. Klinger. New York: W. W. Norton.
Stoker, Bram (1906) Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving. 2 vols. London: William Heinemann.
Valente, Joseph (2002) Dracula’s Crypt: Bram Stoker, Irishness, and the Question of Blood. Ur-
bana: University of Illinois Press.
Brigitte Boudreau is a Ph.D. candidate English Studies at the Université de Montréal, where she
is examining representations of gender and sexuality in Bram Stoker’s life and works. She has pub-
lished in the Journal of Dracula Studies, Ol3Media, and Romanticism and Victorianism on the Net.
Address: Brigitte Boudreau, Département d’études anglaises, Université de Montréal, C.P. 6128, suc-
cursale Centre-ville, Montréal QC H3C 3J7, Canada. [email: brigitte.boudreau.1@umontreal.ca]