fun fact for you all: bram stoker started writing dracula just weeks after oscar wilde’s conviction…….we really are in it now
Dracula! And Oscar Wilde! YES! *drops papers everywhere*
I’ll just casually drop this here–it’s a long (and good) read, but essentially, the author argues that:
- Stoker wrote Dracula as a direct reaction to the Wilde trials
- Many of Dracula’s characteristics actually echo Wilde as described to the trials, and Dracula’s lifestyle resembles an exaggerated version of precautions to hide homosexuality
- Stoker is basically the pro-closeted 1890s alternative to Wilde’s flamboyancy, and that comes out in how he portrays Dracula and Jonathan Harker
- Like if you look deeper into Stoker’s letters to Whitman, he’s practically obsessed with feeling “naturally secretive” and “reticent”
- (Also he and Wilde had some weird personal rivalry going on, since Stoker married Wilde’s definitely-not-straight ex-fiancee, though later they were friendly…there’s a lot to unpack here)
- So, arguably, Dracula was Stoker’s way of apologizing for his silence during Wilde’s trials.
Some highlights:
Wilde’s trial had such a profound effect on Stoker precisely because it fed Stoker’s pre-existing obsession with secrecy, making Stoker retrospectively exaggerate the secrecy in his own writings on male love.
It is difficult, Stoker admits, to speak openly about “so private a matter” as desire. In carefully calibrated language, Stoker asks forgiveness from those who might see that his silence is a sin-to those few nameless souls who know his secret affinity with Wilde.
Since Dracula is a dreamlike projection of Wilde’s traumatic trial, Stoker elaborated and distorted the evidence that the prosecutor used to convict Wilde. In particular, the conditions of secrecy necessary for nineteenth-century homosexual life–nocturnal visits, shrouded windows, no servants–become ominous emblems of Count Dracula’s evil.
Dracula…represents not so much Oscar Wilde as the complex of fears, desires, secrecies, repressions, and punishments that Wilde’s name evoked in 1895. Dracula is Wilde-as-threat, a complex cultural construction not to be confused with the historical individual Oscar Wilde.
tl;dr:
- Stoker is actually too repressed to function
- Oscar Wilde (especially his trials) absolutely influenced Stoker
- Dracula gay
Classic vampire lit really was just about exorcising one’s complicated feelings about one’s ex boyfriend huh?
scribeofruse liked this
carelesswhisper41 liked this
sapphicpumpkinsoup liked this
hatsune-yeetku reblogged this from flowers-grow-in-your-heart
hatsune-yeetku liked this
flowers-grow-in-your-heart reblogged this from duine-aiteach
flowers-grow-in-your-heart liked this
killerspoet reblogged this from honeyglot
killerspoet liked this
littlelosver liked this
antiqueromans liked this
whippedcloudsofcream reblogged this from honeyglot
fishpillowses liked this
taserbats liked this
tiredandangry reblogged this from persaxophone
figsmilk reblogged this from honeyglot
mysteriouslyjoyfulfire liked this
sighfrancisco liked this
obliviousmelon reblogged this from honeyglot
coaticookb liked this
persaxophone reblogged this from duine-aiteach
persaxophone liked this
cailleachportaigh liked this
riseupriseupandcomealong liked this
runerigous reblogged this from duine-aiteach
litchkiing liked this
sunlightsunday liked this
iinvertebrate liked this
atsuhinata liked this