Why Dracula Still Matters

Carol Senf, a professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication, reflects on Dracula's legacy.
Carol Senf

Carol A. Senf, Professor, School of Literature, Media, and Communication. Photo by Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts.

Bram Stoker was arguably a minor novelist when he wrote Dracula in 1897. His book has never been out of print and has piqued the interest of both the general public and scholars from a variety of critical methodologies: Marxist, psychoanalytic, feminist, and cultural studies. One of them is Carol Senf, a professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication. She writes:

Stoker’s novel addresses the xenophobia of the times (with immigrants arriving in England from various corners of the Empire); concern over the fact that women were demanding equal rights in the professions, the universities, the streets, and the bedrooms; and the fear that this creature from the medieval past can dominate a scientific, technological, and progressive present. Seduced by Dracula, they will become — in Professor Van Helsing’s words — “foul things of the night like him, without heart or conscience, preying on the bodies and the souls of those we love best.” 

The fear of becoming like him is one of the reasons various adaptations have emphasized slightly different aspects of Dracula. The 1931 adaptation that established Bela Lugosi as the iconic face of Dracula continues to emphasize his foreignness and his aristocracy. More recent adaptations featuring Christopher Lee, Frank Langella, Jack Palance, or Gary Oldman feature his sexual charisma and the possibility that we ordinary mortals might be seduced into becoming like the monster that retains elements of his essential humanity.  

That humanness is largely missing today, as the still-human vampire has been replaced by hordes of marauding zombies driven only by a mindless desire to feed. Since monsters reflect the deepest fears of the times in which they are created, there’s a reason that humans encounter zombies not as an individualized seductive threat but as an impersonalized herd, identified only by inarticulate, animalized grunts and shambling movements. While I understand the fear of that threat, I miss Dracula, the seductive monster whose touch could bring immortality as well as death. Like many others, I await his resurrection.