cimorene: Black and white image of a woman in a long pale gown and flower crown with loose dark hair, silhouetted against a black background (goth)
[personal profile] cimorene
A couple of days ago I tried to find old text posts from dracula daily's heyday on Tumblr, but I found it impossible due to the fact that people who create fanfic drabbles and fanart in the Dracula fandom use this freely as a fandom tag and I couldn't wade back through it successfully. I only kept looking for about an hour before I gave up, but I did find a post where an asker said something like,

There is no female character treated worse by adaptations than Lucy Westenra. Every single adaptation completely rewrites her to make her an evil whore basically.


And the answerer agreed and provided a bunch of examples of egregious details of this phenomenon in various film adaptations, adding that this slanderous misreading of the text is also popular in criticism.

I tried a brief websearch after that and found about five essays or blog posts doing exactly what the answerer says here before I stumbled on this fascinating paper: Rethinking the New Woman in Dracula by Jordan Kistler.

Abstract: The existing canon of scholarship on Dracula asserts that the sexually aggressive female vampires are representative of the New Woman, and thus are evidence of Stoker’s conservative reaction to changing gender roles. In contrast, this article offers a reinterpretation Dracula in the light of key writings of the New Woman movement which sought to demonize the Victorian marriage market because of its creation of a class of female parasites: idle middle-class woman entirely dependent on fathers and husbands. A close reading of key sections of the novel demonstrates that the female vampires are characterized as traditionally subordinate Victorian housewives, in contrast to the positive presentation of Mina Harker as a New Woman. This reading reveals a text that argues that work for women is the only antidote to the degeneration inherent in traditional womanhood, through which women are reduced to nothing more than their biological functions.

(no subject)

Date: 13 Mar 2025 08:45 pm (UTC)
stranger: Rousseau painting detail of woman and bue flowers (blue flower woman)
From: [personal profile] stranger
Yes to "Rethinking..." I never really tried that kind of analysis of Stoker's Dracula, but as commentary on Victorian gender roles, Absolutely Yes, that's the problem.

Present-day women within marriage and otherwise have been viewed through this lens, but the huge majority of them handle childrearing and/or household management details, *and* a paying job -- a "middle class" wife or daughter is not generally idle at all -- and it doesn't start to address working class women's burdens.

(no subject)

Date: 14 Mar 2025 07:25 pm (UTC)
stranger: Rousseau painting detail of woman and bue flowers (blue flower woman)
From: [personal profile] stranger
Yes, that's the thing I was getting at. The newly visible class of rich bourgeois (that is, people who owned enterprises but not land) has rather defined the Victorian era and after at least to WWI, less so but still a factor up to WWII. These wives were the only class of women who didn't have hands-on domestic labor or (at the upper end) domestic management of a large household or estate.

And, of course, home-making and child-rearing have been virtually invisible to (male) economists, and they're very grumpy about trying to "add" those into the economy now, when day-care is a necessary industry, instead of leaving it all to invisible women, the ones who aren't idle.

(no subject)

Date: 14 Mar 2025 07:37 pm (UTC)
stranger: Rousseau painting detail of woman and bue flowers (blue flower woman)
From: [personal profile] stranger
Of course, the only reason to educate women or even let them educate themselves, is to benefit their husbands (and children). I would guess the Victorian feminists were framing it this way, but thinking of the women themselves too.

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