Bram Stoker and Russophobia: Evidence of the British Fear of Russia in Dracula and The Lady of the ShroudMcFarland, Incorporated, Publishers, 2006年4月18日 - 203 頁 In Victorian England, a marked fear of Russia prevailed in the government and the public. As a result of the Crimean War and other Russian threats to the British empire, the English mind was haunted by a shadowy enemy of barbarous Eastern invaders. The influence of this Russophobia is evident in the works of Bram Stoker, who responded to the Russian challenge to British Imperial hegemony through the character of Dracula, a primitive and menacing Eastern figure destroyed by warriors pledged to the Crown. The text investigates the role of Russophobia in Stoker's fiction, particularly his novels Dracula and The Lady of the Shroud. It offers historical information about Russophobia and the Crimean War, considers Slavic and Balkan connections, and analyzes Stoker's vampire themes. The resulting work shows how two nations' histories intertwine in an unexpected literary avenue. Illustrations include numerous political cartoons of the era. |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 61 筆
... Europe . Her interest is in how travel books by Europeans about non - European parts of the world went ( and go ) about creating the " domestic subject " of Euroimperialism ; how they have engaged metropolitan reading publics with ( or ...
... European travel writers vis - à- vis the lands they visit , which Mary Louise Pratt has labeled the “ monarch- of - all - I - survey " ( 201 ) . Essentially , European travel writers converted “ local knowledges ( discourses ) into ...
... European viewer , the scene must also be rendered with a " density of mean- ing , " something the writer achieves by employing “ a large number of adjec- tival modifiers , " which present the landscape “ as extremely rich in material ...
內容
ONE Russophobia and the Crimean War | 13 |
The Consequences of the Crimean | 48 |
Righting Old Wrongs and Displacing New Fears | 118 |
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