Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > Dracula, Bram Stoker - Clive Leatherdale (essay date 1985)
Dracula, Bram Stoker - Clive Leatherdale (essay date 1985)
Clive Leatherdale (essay date 1985)
SOURCE: Leatherdale, Clive. “Social and Political Commentary.” In Dracula: The Novel & The Legend, A Study of Bram Stoker's Gothic Masterpiece, pp. 206-22. Willingborough, Northamptonshire, England: The Aquarian Press, 1985.
[In the following essay, Leatherdale considers Dracula as a valuable piece of social and political commentary, maintaining that the novel mirrors “the ideological strains and tensions that afflicted the Britain of Stoker's middle years.”]
From the bourgeois point of view, Dracula is … a manic individualist; from his own point of view … he is the bearer of the promise of true union, union which transcends death. From the bourgeois point of view, Dracula stands for sexual perversion and sadism; but we also know that what his victims experience at the moment of consummation is joy, unhealthy perhaps but of a power unknown in conventional...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Spectator (review date 31 July 1897)
- Bacil F. Kirtley (essay date fall 1956)
- Joseph S. Bierman (essay date summer 1972)
- Carrol L. Fry (essay date fall 1972)
- Seymour Shuster (essay date September 1973)
- Judith Weissman (essay date July 1977)
- Phyllis A. Roth (essay date 1982)
- Alan P. Johnson (essay date 1984)
- David Seed (essay date June 1985)
- Clive Leatherdale (essay date 1985)
- S. L. Varnado (essay date 1987)
- Ken Gelder (essay date 1994)
- Stephan Schaffrath (essay date spring 2002)
- Christopher Herbert (essay date summer 2002)
- Dennis Foster (essay date 2002)
- Gregory Castle (essay date 2002)
- Further Reading
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