Home > Dracula Summary & Study Guide > quickNotes > Ideas for Group Discussions
Dracula | Ideas for Group Discussions
Discussion groups may face two significant difficulties when discussing Dracula. One is that group members may not actually read the novel. Frequently, people believe that having seen numerous motion-picture adaptations of the novel that they already know the novel well enough to discuss it. No adaptation actually captures the novel's narrative structure, and one the most interesting aspects of the novel — how Stoker creates terror with words — cannot be evaluated without having read the novel. Perhaps an opening trivia quiz about aspects of the characters, locale, and events, like a...
[The entire page is 659 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Dracula: Overview
- Dracula: About the Author
- Dracula: Setting
- Dracula: Themes and Characters
- Dracula: Literary Qualities
- Dracula: Characters
- Dracula: Social Concerns
- Dracula: Themes
- Dracula: Topics for Discussion
- Dracula: Techniques
- Dracula: Literary Precedents
- Dracula: Ideas for Reports and Papers
- Dracula: Related Titles / Adaptations
- Dracula: Ideas for Group Discussions
- Dracula: For Further Reference
- Copyright
Tell a friend about Dracula at eNotes.
