Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > Dracula, Bram Stoker - Gregory Castle (essay date 2002)
Dracula, Bram Stoker - Gregory Castle (essay date 2002)
Gregory Castle (essay date 2002)
SOURCE: Castle, Gregory. “Ambivalence and Ascendancy in Bram Stoker's Dracula.” In Bram Stoker, Dracula: Complete, Authoritative Text with Biographical, Historical, and Cultural Contexts, Critical History, and Essays from Contemporary Critical Perspectives, edited by John Paul Riquelme, pp. 518-37. Boston: Bedford, 2002.
[In the following essay, Castle utilizes a historical approach to Dracula, focusing on Anglo-Irish relations in the late nineteenth century.]
ASCENDANCY IN DECLINE
Historical approaches to literature have become increasingly appealing to many readers in the past two decades, and nowhere is this more apparent than in Irish studies, where revisionist writing about history and a literary criticism informed by new thinking about postcolonial situations have altered our way of looking at Irish culture and politics. It is within this context that we have seen a...
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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)
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