Suppressed sex acts in Bram Stoker's Dracula may not have been created without literary works as a product of the times. Because the people responsible for writing developed their view of the world in a specific era. Therefore, for Bramstock vampires, we have a vampire myth story full of fear, fear and evil, but this story is a thin cover for suppressed sexual desire of the Victorian era. If you seek critical explanations and comments to support such discussions, you will find that it is "for the erotic vampire" is a lot. Pseudo pornographic critics will mark it. Others say it as' incest, hobby, ora
In Dracula, Bramstock wrote a face-to-face relationship with sexuality - sexual oppression is the center of this theme. When Jonathan Harker witnessed the thought and action of Dracula Castle during his imprisonment, both men and women received sexual oppression. His sexual oppression was best explained by the following quote: 'I was afraid to lift the eyelids, but looking out, I saw it completely under the eyelashes . The girl crouching while squatting down and crouching. When she archured his neck she was actually licking her lips like an animal ... I was waiting with my eyes closed and I was waiting - I was waiting.
In Bram Stoker's Dracula there is a threat of gender role and female sexual desire. Victorian society often suppresses women's sexuality, which is determined by a strict tradition and a strict male and female role. A woman is a pure and innocent virgin, a wife and a mother, or a prostitute. Lucy was once one of the most outward-looking female characters who wanted to know "why they can not marry a girl to three men, or how much can you want her and can not save all these troubles?" . She questioned the traditional sexual desire by aspiring to have multiple husbands. When Dracula turned Lucy into a young addictive vampire, the man could not see the other options, just destroyed her and put it back to pure state. When Stoke killed one of Lucy, one of the most powerful female characters, it caused the reader 's question whether it is due to the threat of women' s sexuality imposed on the novel.