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From Longman's Cultural Edition series, this new edition of Dracula, edited by Andrew Elfenbein, recovers the cultural complexity of Bram Stoker's tale and offers a wide array of contextualizing documents, including contemporary reviews and articles about Eastern Europe, science, gender, and media. From Twilight to True Blood, no creation from the British 1890s has a larger profile in contemporary culture than Dracula. Rather than tracing Dracula through all his later incarnations, this edition offers ways to understand the late Victorian origins of Bram Stoker's remarkable book. While Dracula never simply reflects contemporary trends, reading it with knowledge of contemporary events and debates can clarify what may otherwise seem puzzling. Throughout, Stoker emphasizes that his vampire story takes place not in a hazy, fictional past, but in a sharply realized England of the 1890s. The materials in the sections of Cultural Contexts illuminate the references to Victorian culture in Stoker's version of this seemingly timeless story.
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Previews available in: English Spanish
Subjects
Count Dracula (Fictitious character), Dracula, Conde (Personaje literario), Dracula, Count (Fictitious character), English language, English literature, Fiction, Horror, Horror stories, Horror tales, Monsters, Thriller, Vampires, Vampires in literature, Horror fiction, Irish authors, Epistolary novels, Romanians, British, Psychological fiction, Transylvania (Romania), Textbooks for foreign speakers, Readers for new literates, Children's fiction, Romania, fiction, England, fiction, Vampires, fiction, Fiction, horror, Dracula, count (fictitious character), fiction, British and irish fiction (fictional works by one author), Cartoons and comics, Fiction, fantasy, general, Adaptations, Fiction, gothic, Dictionaries, French, German, Spanish, Juvenile fiction, Children's stories, Literature, Comics & graphic novels, horror, Comic books, strips, etc., Comics & graphic novels, literary, Stoker, bram, 1847-1912, Horror tales, history and criticism, Fiction, psychological, Fiction, historical, general, Film and video adaptations, English Horror tales, History and criticism, County Dracula (Fictitious character), Vampiros, Novela, Dracula (Personaje literario), 18.05 English literature, Count Dracula (Fictional character), Fiction, ghost, Literature, study and teaching, Irish fiction, Dracula (Stoker), Dracula i litteraturen, Dracula (Stoker, Bram), Literary criticism, Gothic literature, British and irish drama (dramatic works by one author), Dracula, count (fictitious character), drama, l, English language, rhetoric, Report writing, Science fiction, fantasy, horror, Drama, Science fiction, Romans, nouvelles, Classics, Action & adventure, Large type books, Temples, Legends, ReligionPeople
Count Dracula (fictitious character), Bram Stoker (1847-1912), Dracula Count (Fictitious character)Places
Transilvania (Rumania), Transylvania (Romania), Whitby (England), Romania, Transylvania, England, WhitbyTimes
19th centuryShowing 13 featured editions. View all 730 editions?
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Drácula
1993, Plaza & Janés
Paperback
in Spanish
- 3a ed. en esta colección
8401492009 9788401492006
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references.
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Work Description
Sink your teeth into the ageless tale of the famous vampire Count Dracula.
Dracula first horrified readers over 125 years ago. Today, this original gothic masterpiece includes a detailed exploration into the 1897 classic vampire novel and its author, Bram Stoker.
In this bonus introduction,
Learn about Stoker’s early life, his colorful career, and the famous friends he made leading up to the creation of his magnum opus, Dracula.
Tune into the speculative theories of Stoker’s personal life and his deeply repressed homosexual tendencies.
Delve deep into the folklore and mysticism that inspired Dracula, the masterful work itself, and the lasting impact it continues to have on pop culture.
This annotated introduction accompanying this classic novel is essential for all fans of Bram Stoker’s Dracula. I welcome you, the reader, as Count Dracula beckoned Jonathan Harker:
“Welcome to my house. Enter freely and at your own free will.”
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- Created December 9, 2010
- 12 revisions
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January 4, 2023 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
December 24, 2022 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
October 18, 2021 | Edited by cianan | Edition correction. |
October 18, 2021 | Edited by cianan | Added new cover |
December 9, 2010 | Created by ImportBot | Imported from Library of Congress MARC record |