Friday, November 15, 2019
Female Characters in Bram Stokers Dracula Essay -- Dracula Bram Stoke
Female Characters in Bram Stoker's Dracula      Having studied Bram Stoker's Dracula as part of my GCSE English  Course, I am going to consider the representation of women in the  novel. The three main characters I will study are Mina, Lucy, and the  three female vampires (belonging to Dracula). I am going to consider  the similarities and differences of each character, and how well they  compare to traditional Victorian women. I will support my answers with  quotes and evidence.    During the early twentieth century, the traditional Victorian ideal  would be a lady of leisure. A Victorian woman effectively had only two  options: she was either a virgin- a model of purity and innocence, or  she was to be a wife and produce an heir. If she was neither these,  not only would men not take any interest in her, but also she had no  consequence in society. Women had to run the household and obey their  husbands, not only them, but to treat all men with respect. Moral  behaviour, and a feminine appearance were also aspects of a  traditional Victorian ideal. As well as this, Victorian women were  expected to be obedient and virtuous.    However, in the late 1800?s the Victorian ideal was being challenged,  which better became known as the ?New Woman?. These new women were to  be considered the feminists of the time, they rejected clothing that  restricted their movement, like corsets and petticoats, and others  even took to riding bicycles. All of these matters evolved into being  a threat for the traditional way of Victorian life.     In Bram Stoker?s ?Dracula?, Mina measures up fairly well as a  traditional Victorian woman. She has a good extent of tradition, and  she matches the acquirements well. Mina is beneath veneer of  modernity; ...              ...acters fulfil their role well, but sometimes everyone betrays the  tradition.    Stoker created an image at a first glance that the characters appear  to be cast in typical gender roles, the purpose of this being not to  upset or threaten the reader?s sense of how things should be. He then  creates suspense into the actions of the characters, for example, Mina  turning into some one like Lucy; will she be lost?    Bram Stoker shows us with Mina, that she was able to achieve her own  goals, as well as the typical goals of Victorian women. Mina still  carries on with the tradition as well as maternal instincts, and we  know this from the important information given to us after the novel;  her having a baby. This is therefore showing us that Victorian Women  could do more than that was traditionally common or expected, without  the rebellious, threatening ?New Woman?.                         
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