Carmilla reads a reply Carmilla is told by Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu about two young women from all walks of life. One of the two young women, Laura, plays the role of a narrator and victim. She started a story from explaining her life and why she is susceptible to the enemy Camila. Laura lives with her father, a British husband who retired from the Austrian army. Laura also mentioned her frigate, another residence of her family.
In Carmilla, Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu plays a traditional male role and gives it to women, Stoker brings back the female body to fun and exchange with Dracula and returns the power to men. At Camilla, the women we met had only angelic appearances. At first, she seemed to be the ideal companion of Laura to meet all Victorian claims. The homosexual relationship between women is not a so-called male business, it helps the patriarchal system that women treat their things rather than having their own will. Carmilla is afraid of Laura's father that she notices the dangerous possibility, as new women's ideas in society, politics, and sexual freedom are troublesome in society. The role of female vampire identifies the role of gender in Victorian women, challenges it, and symbolizes a new woman
Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu's 1872 novel "Camilla" is quoted as the root of the lesbian vampire metaphor. About the looting love of a vampire (title person) of a young woman (a talker) in the 20th century. Since then, this novel has been built on a series of networks and a series of movies. From the 1950's to the 1960's, female pulp novels were published in the United States and the UK. "Coding" titles such as Odd Girl Out, Vin Packer's "Friendship of Evil", Ambannon's "Be Boo Brinker Chronicle" are often used. The story of the UK school also provides a safe haven for "coding" and sometimes even full lesbian novels. In the 1970s, lesbian novels of the second wave of the feminist era became more politicized. Work often includes clear ideological information about separatist feminism and other trends in lesbian art.
Sheridan le Fanu 's classic novel "Carmilla" (Carmilla, 1872) features fascinating pornography including lesbian - centric women' s vampires. The story of Rufanu is held in the Styrian Duchy. These Central European regions are standard features of vampire novels. Another important example of the development of another vampire novel can be found in three epoch-making novels by Paul Favor: LeChevalier Ténèbre (1860), La Vampire (1865) and La Ville Vampire (1874). Marie Nizet's Le Capitaine vampire (1879) has Russian officer Boris Liatoukine, vampire.