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The Brave Gentlemen And Men Of Science

Decent Essays

This lack of maternal instinct is reaffirmed in Stoker’s work in two separate instances: when Lucy lures small children in order to consume them and feed off of their vitality, and in the scene where the Count takes a newborn to be devoured by the three monstrous women. Insatiable, these femme fatales are also responsible for the physical decline of Jonathan Harker; they consume his blood and strength, in a clear allusion to nineteenth-century representations involving the unbridled consumption of female desires and sexuality: “He is young and strong; there are kisses for us all,” (Stoker 69) celebrates one of the vampires. Here, the heroic capabilities of man are simultaneously admired and undercut. The brave gentlemen and men of science outline typical representations of manhood in their shared eagerness to fight the alien threat of the vampire Dracula and his army of infected humans. However, the group’s shared need for masculinity transforms women into commodities, because men’s anxieties are also directed towards homosocial desires, which they fear will develop into a morally corruptive homosexual performance. Signorotti states: “The only way to eliminate the homosexual threat between men is to include a woman in the relationship” (Signorotti 608). Thus, in Dracula the emphasis on male prowess is inherently anchored in the figure of the female “angel in the house” and in their ambition to protect women from external threat. For example, the Count is killed through

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