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Feminism In Dracula

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destroyed. Such Gothic stories are devised in such a way that female characters who express carnal passion, like Lucy and Dracula’s daughters, are always and without fail abandoned in favour of proper women. The main ideologies concerning proper femininity, female dress and decorum, and the fixation on the importance of motherhood undeniably bifurcated the biological differences between men and women socially and spatially. Any woman who did not fit within a patriarchal concept of what constituted the proper woman became a female pariah, ostracised from society. In the novels Dracula, by Bram Stoker, and The Blood of the Vampire, by Florence Marryat, the characterisations of the female vampires seem to either support unfavourable criticism

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