Sexuality In Bram Stoker's Dracula

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Pages: 1

One could argue that Dracula is one of the most sexually charged novels of the Victorian era. In society where a women’s conduct was dictated by society’s extremely rigid expectations, a respectable man had to get his sexual innuendos discreetly from literature. It is evident in the novel by the time Dracula arrives in England that a major contributor to the approaching battle between good and evil pivots upon female sexuality. The Weird Sisters that Harker encounters in the castle represent Harker’s ultimate fantasy that he tries to disguise as a nightmare. These promiscuous women would have been looked upon as low and vulgar in this society yet Harker uses phrases such as “thrilling and repulsive” and “languorous ecstasy” (Stoker 256) to