Description

Book Synopsis
To borrow a phrase used by one of the characters in the novel, Dracula is "nineteenth century up-to-date with a vengeance." In her introduction to this edition Glennis Byron first discusses the famous novel as an expression not of universal fears and desires, but of specifically late nineteenth-century concerns. And she discusses too the ways in which to the modern reader it is not Transylvania but London that is the location of the monstrosity in Dracula.The many appendices include contemporary reviews; source materials drawn on by Stoker; documents expressing contemporary views on trances, sleepwalking and hypnotism; and other relevant writing by Stoker, including "the censorship of Fiction," in which he expresses his belief in the need to defend the social and moral purity of the nation.

Trade Review
No other edition so carefully assembles a wealth of contextual material, nor succeeds so admirably in drawing the reader into Stoker's cultural milieu." - David Glover, University of Southampton

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Introduction
Bram Stoker: A Brief Chronology
A Note on the Text

Dracula

Appendix A: “Dracula’s Guest”
Appendix B: Bram Stoker “The Censorship of Fiction” (1908)
Appendix C: Transylvania: History, Culture, and Folklore
Appendix D: London
Appendix E: Mental Physiology
Appendix F: Degeneration
Appendix G: Gender
Appendix H: Reviews and Interviews

Works Cited and Recommended Reading

Dracula

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A Paperback / softback by Bram Stoker, Glennis Byron

4 in stock


    View other formats and editions of Dracula by Bram Stoker

    Publisher: Broadview Press Ltd
    Publication Date: 30/12/1997
    ISBN13: 9781551111360, 978-1551111360
    ISBN10: 1551111365

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    To borrow a phrase used by one of the characters in the novel, Dracula is "nineteenth century up-to-date with a vengeance." In her introduction to this edition Glennis Byron first discusses the famous novel as an expression not of universal fears and desires, but of specifically late nineteenth-century concerns. And she discusses too the ways in which to the modern reader it is not Transylvania but London that is the location of the monstrosity in Dracula.The many appendices include contemporary reviews; source materials drawn on by Stoker; documents expressing contemporary views on trances, sleepwalking and hypnotism; and other relevant writing by Stoker, including "the censorship of Fiction," in which he expresses his belief in the need to defend the social and moral purity of the nation.

    Trade Review
    No other edition so carefully assembles a wealth of contextual material, nor succeeds so admirably in drawing the reader into Stoker's cultural milieu." - David Glover, University of Southampton

    Table of Contents

    Acknowledgements
    Introduction
    Bram Stoker: A Brief Chronology
    A Note on the Text

    Dracula

    Appendix A: “Dracula’s Guest”
    Appendix B: Bram Stoker “The Censorship of Fiction” (1908)
    Appendix C: Transylvania: History, Culture, and Folklore
    Appendix D: London
    Appendix E: Mental Physiology
    Appendix F: Degeneration
    Appendix G: Gender
    Appendix H: Reviews and Interviews

    Works Cited and Recommended Reading

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