Dracula's depraved character Dracula, Bramstock combines various functions in the novel, and these features are unique in many respects. One way some roles resemble is that they show signs of decline. A person who collapsed is a person who has sunk in a normal situation or in a normal situation and lost its normal or better quality. These people are most likely to get worse to such an extent that they can become mentally and sometimes physically worse and can no longer think or work like ordinary people.
Bram Stoker 's "Vampire" (Dracula, 1897) used a primitive theory to make her debut work, the central hero of Dracula even more terrible. Like Hyde, Earl also collapsed version. He used to be a nobility of Transylvania, but this story describes him as a return to killing others and eating their blood. In the story of Stoke, Dracula became a place of fear of the Gothic style, where the cultural anxiety of the late Victorian era was reflected. The Earl who fell down also showed a relationship between the fear of decline and Imperial Anxiety
On the surface, vampires and Lenfield, who seems to be under Dracula's control, is the only monster in Dracula, but this is not the case. Dracula is described as depravity (Gorny, Eugene.Degeneration theory), and his account asserts the description of violators of Lombroso (Gothic Literature, 112). Jonathan Harker pointed out that his face is "a very strong towering tower with a high nose and particularly curved nose ... his eyebrows are large," fixed, rather cruel "mouth (16, 17) . His behavior is also an ominous crime, trying to invade London so that more people can become prey, turning Lucy into a vampire, eventually killing Lenfield. The concept of sex change is important here as it shows that Stoke's society uses science to try to understand the cause of monsters.