Dracula Through the Lens of Freud
Count Dracula is one of the most recognizable figures in the world today; his name has become synonymous with vampires and with the sexualization of horror. In fact, the sexual aspect of Dracula has become one of the most commented upon features of the figure and of his story. There is certainly a huge basis for such an emphasis in Bram Stoker's original novel. In Dracula, the first book in which the character of Count Dracula is introduced, the title character is a supreme example of the male ego, with his sexuality and his attitude towards and treatment of women characterized by an extreme imbalance of power in his favor. His ability to rob other men, most notably Jonathan Harker and Renfield, of their potency is also quite telling from a psychoanalytical viewpoint. All of these details make a psychoanalytic reading of the novel not only possible, but extremely elucidating in terms of emerging Victorian sexuality and gender perceptions as they were beginning to be understood.
Much of the work of psychoanalysis, especially in literature, revolves around Freud's description of the Oedipal complex. In the case of Dracula, this plays out rather strangely. Because the vampire has no mother (or father for that matter), the standard sexual drama of the desire to murder one's father and sleep with one's mother cannot be plaid out. This places Dracula somewhere outside the realm of normal masculinity; he is almost super-masculine...
Monsters exist everywhere. The exit in fiction and the real world. Their acts may spark a myth or are myths and tall tales. Whether they are used for entertainment or to show history in its darkest moments, people have used monsters since the dawn of modern human. Jeffrey Jerome Cohen writer of "Monster Culture (Seven Theses)" and "The Uncanny" by Sigmund Freud will provide a lens for analysis of some
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