Jonathan and sexuality Jonathan Harker, a fiancée of Mina Murray, is a typical person dealing with sexual desire. He must know that he wants to marry Mina and want to spend the rest of his life, but he still suffers from natural sexual impulses. When the reader found three vampire women at Dracula Castle, the reader apparently found Jonathan's struggle. While he was lying there, Jonathan felt "a painful expectation of suffering" and explained one of the women with "exciting and disgusting intentional sexiness" (38-39).
This journal article explores Dracula's sexual behavior, including sexual arousal in typical aggressive male and female sexual behavior, reflecting pure women and sexually aggressive women's vampires . Demetrakopoulos believes Dracula is the way for a Victorian society, a revolutionary iconic group carnival, a male desire for sexual attacks against women, a mother's rejection, and so on. She emphasizes how women break down gender boundaries by embodying masculinity like intelligence.
The fear of Dracula 's vampire depiction is generally accepted as a metaphor of suppressed Victorian sexuality. But this is only one of many interpretations of Dracula 's metaphor. Judith Halberstam assumed many of them in her article "Monster Techniques: Vampires of Bram Stoker". She wrote: Halberstrom clearly expressed his view on Dracula, and it shows that people are considered to be an evolved and outdated concept increasingly defeated. A depiction of a multinational lead band that quickly shares, organizes, and processes new information using the latest technology (such as telegrams) is the cause of the vampire being destroyed. This is one of many interpretations of the metaphor of the core character of the horror novel model, since analysis has a lot of potential metaphor from religion to anti-Semitism.