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miercuri, 30 noiembrie 2011

chapter 8!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!women and marriage

So chapter 8 is all from Mina's point of view, which means that even though some important things happen in it, its really boring. At the start of the chapter there are some references to the "New Woman", which is basically about feminism, and there are some slightly sarcastic remarks about women proposing to men and stuff. So we get the idea that Stoker isn't really a fan of woman being allowed to do anything other than stay in the kitchen. This attitude is also shown in his characterization of Mina, who is meant to be this perfect woman but is actually a pathetic, stereotypically stupid female who gets scared by cows.

Anyway then Lucy goes missing during the night, and Mina ventures out to get her. She spots her "half-reclining" outside the abbey with some mysterious black shape (Dracula) bending over her. There are quite a few things in this scene that could be symbolic of a wedding - Lucy's white nightdress and the Count's black clothes represent the traditional clothes worn at a wedding, and the ruined abbey could be seen as a slightly twisted version of a wedding chapel.
So anyway then Mina runs over (I was kind of surprised by this, i thought she would have been too scared. I guess she's not completely useless) and Dracula disappears, but not before she glimpses his "white face and red, gleaming eyes". when she reaches Lucy, Lucy is breathing in "long, heavy gasps" which suggests the aftermath of a physical act - maybe Dracula raped her. And there's blood on her dress too, which could have been the breaking of the hymen. This all adds to the macabre wedding theory.

So then Mina takes Lucy home, and is so worried that people will see her without shoes on that she covers her feet in mud. Because mud looks so much like shoes.

The next day she notices that Lucy has these little "red points like pin-pricks" on her throat, but instead of coming to the conclusion that Lucy has been bitten by a vampire, she thinks she pricked it on a safety-pin. Stupid.

In conclusion, judging from his characters, Stoker was basically sexist and probably agreed with that Madonna-Whore Freud thing, since all the women in Dracula are either idiots (Mina) or whores (vampire brides).

luni, 14 noiembrie 2011

vampires


1. Count von Count

Count von Count is a mysterious but friendly vampire-like Muppet on Sesame Street. He first appeared on the show in Season 4, whilst counting blocks in a sketch with Bert and Ernie.

The Count has a compulsive love of counting known as arithmomania. He will count anything and everything, regardless of size, amount, or how much annoyance he causes others around him. In one song he admitted that he sometimes counts himself. When he finishes counting, The Count usually laughs and announces his total. This finale is usually accompanied by a crash of thunder and a flash of lightning, provided by the Count's personal raincloud.

The Count lives in a castle along with a number of bats which he often counts. Some of the pet bats are named, including Grisha, Misha, Sasha, and Tattiana. He also has a cat called Fatatita, and an octupus named Octavia. He plays a large pipe organ, and in some illustrations he is seen playing the violin. In recent years, the Count has appeared on each episode to announce the Number of the Day playing notes on his organ to count up to the featured number.

It is suggested that the Count may be a distant relative of Count Dracula, but he is described as a "Numerical Vampire" rather than a regular vampire. Some insist that the Count is not a vampire at all, but evidence suggests otherwise. Examples of typically vampiric behaviour displayed by the Count include him waving his hands to exercise hypnotic power over other Muppets, holding his cape over the lower part of his face while moving and failing to produce a reflection in front of a mirror. However, unlike most traditional vampires the Count enjoys relaxing in the sunshine, as seen in an episode of Sesame Street when he goes on a counting vacation.

2. Lilith

Lilith is Dracula's oldest child, and is his only child by his first wife, Zofia, who was forced on Dracula by his father. After Dracula's father died, he renounced Zofia and forced her and their infant daughter to leave Castle Dracula so that he could marry a woman he loved. Lilith was raised by gypsies to whom she had been entrusted after her mother's suicide. Lilith's foster-mother was the gypsy Gretchin. When Lilith was a young girl, Dracula, now a vampire, attacked and murdered Gretchin's son Arni, enraging her into seeking revenge. She cast a spell upon Lilith to make her into a vampire, but one with rather different powers: she did not fear holy symbols, and was not harmed at all by being out in the daylight. As part of the curse, she would haunt Dracula, ever opposing him, until Dracula was finally destroyed.

3. Edward Cullen

Edward is a vampire from Twilight, the extremely boring vampire series by Stephanie Meyer. He is not a typical vampire in that he does not drink human blood, choosing to drink animal blood instead as he thinks it is more moral. More characteristic vampire traits he possesses include superhuman strength and immortality. He is also unable to go outside in sunlight, but this is not because it will harm him it just makes his skin glitter which would attract unwanted attention. In the Twilight series Edward falls in love with a human called Bella, who later turns into a vampire to be with him.