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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
51

The Savage and the Gentleman : A Comparative Analysis of Two Vampire Characters in Bram Stoker's Dracula and Anne Rice's The Vampire Lestat

Anttonen, Ramona January 2000 (has links)
The creatures known as vampires have inspired authors for several hundred years. These beings are stereotypically described as belonging to a “nocturnal species” who live “in shadows” and drink “our lives in secrecy” (Auerbach 1). However, they have by now appeared so often in literary works, and in so many different shapes and sizes, that they are much too nuanced to be called ‘stereotypes.’ This essay will make a historical comparison between two fictional vampires, one hundred years apart, in order to show that a change has taken place when it comes to how vampires as fictional characters have been portrayed in terms of their appearance, their psychology, and their roles in society. The first novel chosen is, for obvious reasons, Bram Stoker’s Dracula. It was written at the turn of the nineteenth century by a male author and is probably the first novel that comes into mind when the word vampire is mentioned. The second novel, The Vampire Lestat, was written almost a century later, in 1986, by a female author, who, to readers of vampire fiction, is a worthy successor of Stoker. Her name is Anne Rice, best known for her debut novel Interview with the Vampire (1976). The two novels are naturally chosen because of their similarities, but perhaps even more so because of their differences. Dracula is a typically Victorian Gothic novel, which is set in the remote mountains of Transylvania, and in the modern capital London, contemporary to when the novel was published. It is written in epistolary form but never allows for the main character, Count Dracula, to defend or explain himself and his actions in a first-person narrative. The Vampire Lestat, on the other hand, is a Neo-Gothic novel that focus less on conventional Gothic elements, for example gloomy settings, and more on the psychological aspects of what it is like to actually be a vampire. Unlike Dracula, it is the main character’s fictional autobiography in which he recalls his life in France, his transformation into a vampire, and his current career in the United States as a famous rock star. Nina Auerbach calls it “a series of temporal regressions in which Lestat . . . embarks on a backward quest out of the knowable world” (172). Both novels used in this analysis are thus part of the Gothic genre, one being a Victorian Gothic and the other Neo-Gothic, but there are significant differences between the two. I will investigate how these differences reveal themselves when it comes to setting and plot. However, the novels are similar in that they present two male vampires who belong to the nobility and have lived on through the centuries. The vampires both want to be where the power is, which means, in the case of Stoker’s Dracula, that he tries to conquer nineteenth-century London and seduce a young intelligent woman named Mina. Lestat, on the other hand, wants to become a famous twentieth-century rock star in the United States and simply have a good time while being a vampire (Auerbach 6). The aim of this essay is to investigate what is typical of the genres that the two novels belong to and determine what has changed in the vampires’ physical appearance, their manners and their ability to adapt to modern society. In the first section of the essay I will give a description of the typical elements of the Gothic and the Neo-Gothic genres and then compare them in order to make a generic description of the two novels, Dracula and The Vampire Lestat. Vampire fiction will be treated as a sub-genre to the Gothic genre. In the succeeding two sections I will make comparative analyses of the two novels, particularly of the main characters, in order to describe the similarities and differences between the two and study how the vampire character has changed during the last century. Much of the discussion, especially regarding Dracula, will be based on Cesare Lombroso’s concept of the ‘criminal man,’ and various modern scholars’ opinion that the vampire is seen as an outcast and a threat to society.
52

Images de la transgression : Carmilla (1872), Dracula (1897) et les vampires d'Anne Rice / Images of transgression : Carmilla (1872), Dracula (1897) and Anne Rice's vampires

Paquiot, Alethea 04 November 2016 (has links)
Devenu célèbre sous les traits de Dracula, le vampire est un monstre révélateur et résilient qui s'est fait archétype incontournable de la culture populaire et dont l'existence diégétique précède le roman de Bram Stoker. Du folklore à la fiction et de l'ombre à la lumière, son évolution est représentative des sociétés et des époques dans lequel il revient à la vie. A la fois transgressifs et normatifs, ses avatars jouent un rôle cathartique en incarnant le refus des lois humaines naturelles et divines, mais aussi la réitération de ces règles et la création de canons littéraires. Cette étude diachronique centrée sur "Carmilla" (1872), "Dracula" (1897) et les vampires d'Anne Rice démontre que leurs aventures invitent à réfléchir autant aux conséquances des fautes qu'à la validité des normes, à l'essence de la nature et des failles humaine et à la fonction libératrice des personnages de fiction et particulièrement des monstres. / Known to most as Dracula, the vampire is revealing and resilient monster whose diegetic existence predates Stoker's novel, and that has become a key figure of popular culture. From folklore to fiction and from shadow to ligjhte, its evolution is indicative of the times and societies in wich it return to life. Equally transgressive and normative, its avatars play a cathartic role aas they epitomize rejection of human, natural and divine laws, but also the reiteration of the rules and the creation of literary canons. This diachronic study focused on "Carmilla" (1872), "Dracula" (1897) and Anne Rice's vampires shows that their adventures induce reflection on both the consequences of wrongdoing and the validity of norms, on the essence of human nature and hubris, and the liberating fucntion of fictional characters, particulary monsters.
53

Mina, the "Angel", and Lucy, the "Monster" : two sides of femininity in Bram Stoker's Dracula / Mina, "Ängeln", och Lucy, "Monstret" : två sidor av femininitet i Bram Stokers Dracula

Bergstrand, Julia January 2020 (has links)
This paper analyses the characters Mina and Lucy in Bram Stoker’s Dracula, showing how they are juxtaposed in terms of femininity. By using feminist criticism and the concepts of the angel in the house, monstrous femininity, and the virgin/whore dichotomy, this paper explores how Mina represents the self-sacrificing, supportive, and wifely angel in the house, while Lucy represents the sexual, disobedient, and powerful monstrous female. This is analyzed through Mina’s interactions with the men, as well as through her view on femininity, and through Lucy’s interactions with the men and with Mina. This paper then explores how these differing gender roles lead to different outcomes for the two women. Mina is excluded but is able to be purified from vampirism while still alive. In contrast, Lucy, being a threat to British Victorian femininity, has to be killed and mutilated before her memory can be purified. How well the women fit into the male community’s view of the Victorian female ideal, with Mina fitting it the best, is found to be the reason for why Lucy suffers a worse fate than Mina.
54

Till skräckens dimensioner : En uppsats om skräckfiktionens potential att bidra med verktyg för att hantera verkliga svårigheter

Köngäs, Denise January 2022 (has links)
Flera som intresserar sig för skräckfiktion menar att skräckfiktionen har potential att ge läsaren högre beredskap vid katastrofer, hjälpa läsaren att bearbeta ångest och oro, öka förståelsen för de egna rädslorna samt ge läsaren verktyg för att hantera sina rädslor. Syftet med denna uppsats är att genom litteraturanalyser belysa skräckfiktionens potential att bidra med verktyg för att hantera verkliga svårigheter. I de analyserade verken får läsaren insyn i flera olika rädslor som karaktärerna har. Läsaren ges möjligheten att leva sig in i dessa och se hur karaktärerna hanterar dem. Romanerna tar alla upp viktiga ämnen och belyser viktiga frågor. Genom att leva sig in i, diskutera och reflektera över romanerna och de typer av frågor som de väcker, som kan upplevas både som stora och tunga, så erbjuds en möjlighet till att få bättre beredskap inför verkliga situationer där frågor likt dessa berörs. Genom att ställa resultatet av litteraturanalyserna mot uppsatsens bakgrund, teoretiska ramverk och tidigare forskning så dras slutsatsen att elever genom skräckfiktion får uppleva emotionella erfarenheter utan direkta risker och ges möjligheten att interagera med en fiktiv verklighet som de kan lära sig av samtidigt som de får leva sig in i marginaliserade karaktärer som de kan relatera till. Genom dessa erfarenheter får eleverna möjlighet att utveckla copingstrategier, stärka den empatiska förmågan, tillägna sig meningsfulla kunskaper och utveckla tolerans och uppskattning för individuella skillnader.
55

Traumatic desire in three gothic texts : The Monk, Dracula, and Lost

Kearley, Miranda S. 01 January 2008 (has links)
Using psychoanalytic theory, one can see that the Gothic genre addresses fears to reveal the ever-tense dynamics between subject and object- the subject as the individual with agency and the object as that which the subject desires and which thus lacks agency. This tension between the subject and object exposes the subject's fears about the object specifically pertaining to female sexuality, desire, familial dynamics, and reproduction, and it is these fears that shape the subject's psyche. These fears are addressed in psychoanalysis on two levels: terror and horror. Terror is the fear of what one does not know, whereas horror coincides with the fear of that which one does know. This distinction itself addresses the two parts of the psyche: the unconscious and the conscious. Through the lens of psychoanalysis, we can see that the switch or overlap between these layers of the psyche, is experienced as the uncanny, where the repressed again becomes familiar. In Gothic texts, the return of the repressed occurs for the subject as it relates to the object of desire, and the trauma surrounding this relationship. Through the analysis of three different Gothic texts from three different time periods- Matthew Lewis's The Monk (1796), Bram Stoker's Dracula (1897), and David Lindelofs contemporary television series Lost (2004 )- I argue that these texts demonstrate the ways in which their cultures understood (and understand) subjectivity as constituted through fear of and desire for the object. From the eighteenth century to the twenty-first century, we can see a transition from a reaction to trauma to a need/or trauma in the texts.
56

Dupla metamorfose: O vampiro de Curitiba de Dalton Trevisan

Carvalho, Lílian Nunes da Silva 25 September 2009 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2016-04-28T19:59:19Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Lilian Nunes da Silva Carvalho.pdf: 409499 bytes, checksum: d13a266aa0604cdea2c63e2acadfe3d2 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2009-09-25 / The purpose of this dissertation is to analyze how Dalton Trevisan s motifs like double and the myth of the vampire shaped the journey of the protagonist Nelsinho. O Vampiro de Curitiba contains these issues. to be analyzed. We believe that Nelsinho suffers an inner conflict because of being both the subject and the object of his own anxieties; therefore he assumes the role of a vampire in order to obtain sexual satisfaction by means of seduction. We started by reflecting on this duality and what else characterizes him. In the case of a diffuse subject we chose to look at the protagonist from the perspective of Sigmund Freud and Carl Gustav Jung. We noticed that in the Freudian perspective, double rises from the conflict between two psychic instances, the Id and Superego. The first one is impulsive and the second is repressive. The Ego acts as the mediator and is responsible for doing what the winner demands. The issue about double is related to the Unheimlich, a term used by Freud to describe the ambivalence between what is known and what is unknown. To Jung the approach to duality occurs through a self-regulatory system responsible for the oscillation between opposite poles; that is, the conscious (persona) and unconscious (shadow). These poles are used to characterize the integration of the personality of the human being. Then we argued the function of myth and the origin of the myth of the vampire, because such a discussion is necessary in order to understand the relationship between the characters Dracula and Nelsinho: Dracula needs blood to keep alive and Nelsinho needs sex in order not to die. As the author does not show us their stories in linear sequences, we also analyze the characters by reading several stories and piecing together the fragments of the character we found in each story. We conclude that Nelsinho is a dual person because he always lives the antagonism which makes him to be with between being both a subject and an object of love relationships. He is linked to the vampire just by looking for the element that keeps him alive / O propósito desta dissertação consiste em analisar, na escrita de Dalton Trevisan, a configuração de temas como o duplo e o mito do vampiro no percurso do protagonista Nelsinho. Para tanto, foi selecionado o livro O Vampiro de Curitiba, por conter textos receptíveis à análise dos temas. Acreditamos que tal personagem vive um conflito interno entre ser sujeito e objeto de suas próprias angústias, e por isso assume o papel vampiro a fim de obter satisfação sexual por meio da sedução. Começamos por refletir a respeito da dualidade e o que a caracteriza. Por se tratar de um tema difuso, optamos pela escolha do viés psicanalítico de Sigmund Freud e Carl Gustav Jung. Vimos que, pela perspectiva freudiana, o duplo brota do conflito entre duas instâncias psíquicas denominadas Id e Superego, sendo a primeira impulsiva e a segunda repressora. O mediador desse embate é o Ego, instância responsável em executar a ação determinada pelo vencedor. Essa questão do duplo se relaciona com o Unheimlich, termo usado por Freud para caracterizar a ambivalência entre o que é estranho e o que é familiar. Pelo enfoque junguiano a dualidade ocorre por meio de um sistema auto-regulador responsável pelas oscilações entre os pólos opostos, ou seja, o consciente (persona) e o inconsciente (sombra). Esses pólos servem para caracterizar a integração da personalidade do ser. Em seguida, discorremos sobre a função do mito e sobre a origem do mito do vampiro, porque tal discussão se faz necessária ao entendimento da relação entre o mito do vampiro, no caso Drácula, e Nelsinho. Drácula necessita do sangue para viver e Nelsinho necessita do sexo para não morrer. Como o autor não nos mostra contos em uma seqüência linear, lemos vários contos unindo os fragmentos da personagem para analisá-la com um todo. Concluímos que Nelsinho é um ser duplo porque vive sempre com o antagonismo entre ser sujeito ou objeto das relações amorosas. Associa-se ao vampiro somente pela busca do elemento que o mantém vivo
57

The myth of the vampire and blood imagery in Bram Stoker's Dracula

Zanini, Claudio Vescia January 2007 (has links)
O objetivo deste trabalho é apresentar uma leitura do romance Drácula, do escritor irlandês Bram Stoker, publicado em 1897. O propósito do estudo é identificar os arquétipos e imagens predominantes em Drácula, mostrando em que medida eles representam questões pertinentes à sociedade vitoriana e aos públicos receptores que obra teve desde então. A obra é publicada em um momento histórico que se configura ponto crucial na conflituada transição entre os antigos valores rurais britânicos e os da moderna sociedade urbana contemporânea, e a conseqüência desta transição é uma mudança drástica no código comportamental britânico. Diversos elementos desta transformação podem ser identificados nas representações simbólicas encontradas no romance de Stoker, e a voracidade com que a obra é consumida pelos leitores desde a época vitoriana se configura sintoma das premências decorrentes da excessiva repressão daquele período. A análise do arquétipo do vampiro e das imagens arquetípicas apresentadas em Drácula se dará predominantemente através do exame das implicações psicológicas e antropológicas ligadas ao imaginário do Sangue. O embasamento teórico se ampara nas contribuições prestadas por Carl Gustav Jung e Gilbert Durand. A dissertação vem subdividida em três capítulos. Na primeira parte do capítulo um apresento as contextualizações referentes a certos fenômenos observados na sociedade vitoriana, especialmente no que tange às implicaturas de gênero no código comportamental da época, e na segunda apresento contextualizações referentes a personagens históricos que influenciaram Bram Stoker na criação de seu personagem principal. No segundo capítulo, remeto ao embasamento teórico, apresentando os conceitos definidos por Jung nos quais a leitura do capítulo 3 se ampara, bem como analiso símbolos, imagens e arquétipos em Drácula de acordo com os regimes da imaginação propostos por Durand. No terceiro capítulo ofereço minha leitura do romance, na qual identifico e analiso imagens e símbolos do Sangue presentes no romance. Na conclusão, apresento as últimas considerações, com o intuito de ratificar as fortes ligações que se estabelecem entre os significados velados inscritos no romance e as vivências da sociedade receptora, tendo como base o mito do vampiro e sua associação com o imaginário do sangue na tentativa de explicar a bemsucedida e contínua recepção do romance. / The aim of this thesis is to present a reading of Dracula, published in 1897 by the Irish author Bram Stoker. The purpose of the investigation is to identify the predominant archetypes and images in Dracula, showing to what extent they represent relevant issues to Victorian society and the audiences the novel has had since then. The work is published in a crucial historical moment, during which the British traditional rural values are replaced by modern and urban ones. A major consequence of such a transition is a drastic change in the British behavioral code. Several elements in such a transformation can be identified in Stoker’s novel, and the eagerness with which the work was accepted by Victorian audiences is a symptom of the needs that resulted from the excessive repression from that period. The analysis of the archetype of the vampire and the archetypal images presented in Dracula unfolds predominantly through the examination of the psychological and anthropological implications connected to blood imagery. The main theoretical tools come from the studies of Carl Gustav Jung and Gilbert Durand. The thesis is subdivided in three chapters. In the first part of chapter one I present some contextualization referring to certain phenomena perceived in the Victorian society, mainly the ones regarding the gender implications in the behavioral code of the time, and in the second part I present contextualization connected to historical characters who influenced Bram Stoker in the creation of his main character. In chapter two I present the theoretical approach, introducing the concepts defined by Jung upon which the reading in chapter 3 is based. I also analyze symbols, images and archetypes in Dracula according to the orders of the image proposed by Durand. In chapter three I offer my reading, identifying and analyzing blood images and symbols in the novel. In the conclusion, I present the final considerations, with the purpose of ratifying the strong bonds connecting the underlying meanings present in the novel and the life experience of the audience, having as a basis the myth of the vampire and its association to the blood imaginary, in an attempt to explain the successful and continuous reception of the novel.
58

The myth of the vampire and blood imagery in Bram Stoker's Dracula

Zanini, Claudio Vescia January 2007 (has links)
O objetivo deste trabalho é apresentar uma leitura do romance Drácula, do escritor irlandês Bram Stoker, publicado em 1897. O propósito do estudo é identificar os arquétipos e imagens predominantes em Drácula, mostrando em que medida eles representam questões pertinentes à sociedade vitoriana e aos públicos receptores que obra teve desde então. A obra é publicada em um momento histórico que se configura ponto crucial na conflituada transição entre os antigos valores rurais britânicos e os da moderna sociedade urbana contemporânea, e a conseqüência desta transição é uma mudança drástica no código comportamental britânico. Diversos elementos desta transformação podem ser identificados nas representações simbólicas encontradas no romance de Stoker, e a voracidade com que a obra é consumida pelos leitores desde a época vitoriana se configura sintoma das premências decorrentes da excessiva repressão daquele período. A análise do arquétipo do vampiro e das imagens arquetípicas apresentadas em Drácula se dará predominantemente através do exame das implicações psicológicas e antropológicas ligadas ao imaginário do Sangue. O embasamento teórico se ampara nas contribuições prestadas por Carl Gustav Jung e Gilbert Durand. A dissertação vem subdividida em três capítulos. Na primeira parte do capítulo um apresento as contextualizações referentes a certos fenômenos observados na sociedade vitoriana, especialmente no que tange às implicaturas de gênero no código comportamental da época, e na segunda apresento contextualizações referentes a personagens históricos que influenciaram Bram Stoker na criação de seu personagem principal. No segundo capítulo, remeto ao embasamento teórico, apresentando os conceitos definidos por Jung nos quais a leitura do capítulo 3 se ampara, bem como analiso símbolos, imagens e arquétipos em Drácula de acordo com os regimes da imaginação propostos por Durand. No terceiro capítulo ofereço minha leitura do romance, na qual identifico e analiso imagens e símbolos do Sangue presentes no romance. Na conclusão, apresento as últimas considerações, com o intuito de ratificar as fortes ligações que se estabelecem entre os significados velados inscritos no romance e as vivências da sociedade receptora, tendo como base o mito do vampiro e sua associação com o imaginário do sangue na tentativa de explicar a bemsucedida e contínua recepção do romance. / The aim of this thesis is to present a reading of Dracula, published in 1897 by the Irish author Bram Stoker. The purpose of the investigation is to identify the predominant archetypes and images in Dracula, showing to what extent they represent relevant issues to Victorian society and the audiences the novel has had since then. The work is published in a crucial historical moment, during which the British traditional rural values are replaced by modern and urban ones. A major consequence of such a transition is a drastic change in the British behavioral code. Several elements in such a transformation can be identified in Stoker’s novel, and the eagerness with which the work was accepted by Victorian audiences is a symptom of the needs that resulted from the excessive repression from that period. The analysis of the archetype of the vampire and the archetypal images presented in Dracula unfolds predominantly through the examination of the psychological and anthropological implications connected to blood imagery. The main theoretical tools come from the studies of Carl Gustav Jung and Gilbert Durand. The thesis is subdivided in three chapters. In the first part of chapter one I present some contextualization referring to certain phenomena perceived in the Victorian society, mainly the ones regarding the gender implications in the behavioral code of the time, and in the second part I present contextualization connected to historical characters who influenced Bram Stoker in the creation of his main character. In chapter two I present the theoretical approach, introducing the concepts defined by Jung upon which the reading in chapter 3 is based. I also analyze symbols, images and archetypes in Dracula according to the orders of the image proposed by Durand. In chapter three I offer my reading, identifying and analyzing blood images and symbols in the novel. In the conclusion, I present the final considerations, with the purpose of ratifying the strong bonds connecting the underlying meanings present in the novel and the life experience of the audience, having as a basis the myth of the vampire and its association to the blood imaginary, in an attempt to explain the successful and continuous reception of the novel.
59

A confiabilidade do transporte coletivo urbano em corredores estruturais de ônibus / Reliability of public transport in bus structural corridors

Silva, Thais Cristina Cunha e 28 January 2010 (has links)
Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / The aim of this work is to evaluate the reliability of the urban public transport using as a study case the bus structural corridor in the João Naves de Ávila Avenue, one of the main avenues in Uberlândia, MG, Brazil. Two softwares, Simulation and Assignment of Traffic in Urban Road Networks SATURN and Dynamic Route Assignment Combining User Learning and Microsimulation DRACULA, both developed by the University of Leeds UK, were used to simulate and conclude about the influence of the deployment of the corridor on the bus route. Here it is presented an analysis on the reliability for the public transport along the avenue, where a bus-only lane and thirteen boarding and alighting stations were built, through indicators such as travel time, punctuality and regularity, among others. Through the simulation of various scenarios, this work also presents an analysis on how reliability indicators were affected by the proposed changes. Finally, a comparison between the travel time before and after the construction of the bus corridor allowed a conclusion to be reached on the actual benefits brought on by the deployment of a structural bus corridor in medium sized cities. / Este trabalho tem como objetivo avaliar a confiabilidade do transporte coletivo urbano por ônibus tendo como base o corredor estrutural de ônibus da Avenida João Naves de Ávila, uma das principais vias da cidade de Uberlândia, MG. Para tanto, foram utilizados os programas computacionais Simulation and Assignment of Traffic in Urban Road Networks SATURN e Dynamic Route Assignment Combining User Learning and Microsimulation DRACULA. Os programas, ambos desenvolvidos pela Universidade de Leeds, na Inglaterra, foram usados na execução das simulações necessárias para concluir quanto ao efeito que a implantação do corredor de ônibus acarretou sobre a linha de ônibus que percorre a avenida. É apresentada uma análise sobre a confiabilidade do transporte coletivo urbano na avenida, onde foi implantada uma faixa exclusiva para ônibus e treze estações de embarque e desembarque, por meio de indicadores como tempo de viagem, regularidade e pontualidade, entre outros. Além do cenário básico, foram propostos cenários variados a fim de verificar como os indicadores de confiabilidade seriam afetados. Por fim, esse trabalho traz a comparação entre os tempos de viagem antes e após a implantação do corredor e visa concluir sobre os benefícios reais da implantação de um corredor de ônibus em cidades médias. / Mestre em Engenharia Civil
60

The myth of the vampire and blood imagery in Bram Stoker's Dracula

Zanini, Claudio Vescia January 2007 (has links)
O objetivo deste trabalho é apresentar uma leitura do romance Drácula, do escritor irlandês Bram Stoker, publicado em 1897. O propósito do estudo é identificar os arquétipos e imagens predominantes em Drácula, mostrando em que medida eles representam questões pertinentes à sociedade vitoriana e aos públicos receptores que obra teve desde então. A obra é publicada em um momento histórico que se configura ponto crucial na conflituada transição entre os antigos valores rurais britânicos e os da moderna sociedade urbana contemporânea, e a conseqüência desta transição é uma mudança drástica no código comportamental britânico. Diversos elementos desta transformação podem ser identificados nas representações simbólicas encontradas no romance de Stoker, e a voracidade com que a obra é consumida pelos leitores desde a época vitoriana se configura sintoma das premências decorrentes da excessiva repressão daquele período. A análise do arquétipo do vampiro e das imagens arquetípicas apresentadas em Drácula se dará predominantemente através do exame das implicações psicológicas e antropológicas ligadas ao imaginário do Sangue. O embasamento teórico se ampara nas contribuições prestadas por Carl Gustav Jung e Gilbert Durand. A dissertação vem subdividida em três capítulos. Na primeira parte do capítulo um apresento as contextualizações referentes a certos fenômenos observados na sociedade vitoriana, especialmente no que tange às implicaturas de gênero no código comportamental da época, e na segunda apresento contextualizações referentes a personagens históricos que influenciaram Bram Stoker na criação de seu personagem principal. No segundo capítulo, remeto ao embasamento teórico, apresentando os conceitos definidos por Jung nos quais a leitura do capítulo 3 se ampara, bem como analiso símbolos, imagens e arquétipos em Drácula de acordo com os regimes da imaginação propostos por Durand. No terceiro capítulo ofereço minha leitura do romance, na qual identifico e analiso imagens e símbolos do Sangue presentes no romance. Na conclusão, apresento as últimas considerações, com o intuito de ratificar as fortes ligações que se estabelecem entre os significados velados inscritos no romance e as vivências da sociedade receptora, tendo como base o mito do vampiro e sua associação com o imaginário do sangue na tentativa de explicar a bemsucedida e contínua recepção do romance. / The aim of this thesis is to present a reading of Dracula, published in 1897 by the Irish author Bram Stoker. The purpose of the investigation is to identify the predominant archetypes and images in Dracula, showing to what extent they represent relevant issues to Victorian society and the audiences the novel has had since then. The work is published in a crucial historical moment, during which the British traditional rural values are replaced by modern and urban ones. A major consequence of such a transition is a drastic change in the British behavioral code. Several elements in such a transformation can be identified in Stoker’s novel, and the eagerness with which the work was accepted by Victorian audiences is a symptom of the needs that resulted from the excessive repression from that period. The analysis of the archetype of the vampire and the archetypal images presented in Dracula unfolds predominantly through the examination of the psychological and anthropological implications connected to blood imagery. The main theoretical tools come from the studies of Carl Gustav Jung and Gilbert Durand. The thesis is subdivided in three chapters. In the first part of chapter one I present some contextualization referring to certain phenomena perceived in the Victorian society, mainly the ones regarding the gender implications in the behavioral code of the time, and in the second part I present contextualization connected to historical characters who influenced Bram Stoker in the creation of his main character. In chapter two I present the theoretical approach, introducing the concepts defined by Jung upon which the reading in chapter 3 is based. I also analyze symbols, images and archetypes in Dracula according to the orders of the image proposed by Durand. In chapter three I offer my reading, identifying and analyzing blood images and symbols in the novel. In the conclusion, I present the final considerations, with the purpose of ratifying the strong bonds connecting the underlying meanings present in the novel and the life experience of the audience, having as a basis the myth of the vampire and its association to the blood imaginary, in an attempt to explain the successful and continuous reception of the novel.

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