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首页> 外文期刊>Journal of Gender Studies >Sins of the flesh: anorexia, eroticism and the female vampire in Bram Stoker's Dracula
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Sins of the flesh: anorexia, eroticism and the female vampire in Bram Stoker's Dracula

机译:肉的罪过:厌食,色情和布拉姆·斯托克吸血鬼中的女性吸血鬼

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This article discusses anorexia as an aesthetic ideal rather than as an actual illness, as well as its erotic connotations in the context of Victorian literature and culture. The nineteenth century regarded anorexia as a gendered disease: like other so-called ‘female maladies’, it is connected with male standards of femininity and the devastating effects it has on women's self-image. The sometimes contradictory representation of anorexia in literature offers a particularly interesting insight into cultural assumptions of what was (is?) considered as ‘truly feminine’. I will concentrate on the analysis of vampire women in Stoker's Dracula, since the female vampire manifests all the contradictions in Victorian and fin de siècle assumptions of femininity. In the novel, all the vampires except the Count himself are female, and the transformations these women undergo are mainly manifest in their bodies. The act of eating in Dracula becomes not only aesthetically and culturally unacceptable but monstrous and grotesque, the vampire thereby becoming an exaggerated representation of the Victorian culture of anorexia and personifying male fears about women and hunger. Stoker's message seems to be that the fleshy sensual woman is not only sexually incontinent but fatally dangerous, thus needing to be corrected - if not savagely eliminated.View full textDownload full textKeywordsVictorian, femininity, aesthetics, anorexia, eroticism, vampireRelated var addthis_config = { ui_cobrand: "Taylor & Francis Online", services_compact: "citeulike,netvibes,twitter,technorati,delicious,linkedin,facebook,stumbleupon,digg,google,more", pubid: "ra-4dff56cd6bb1830b" }; Add to shortlist Link Permalink http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09589236.2010.494346
机译:本文讨论了厌食是一种审美理想,而不是一种实际疾病,并讨论了维多利亚时代文学和文化背景下的厌食症。十九世纪将厌食症视为一种性别疾病:像其他所谓的“女性疾病”一样,厌食症与男性的女性气质以及对女性自我形象的破坏性影响有关。厌食症在文学中有时是相互矛盾的表现形式,对于被认为是“真正的女性”的文化假设提供了特别有趣的见解。我将集中分析斯托克吸血鬼中的吸血鬼女性,因为女性吸血鬼体现了维多利亚时代和女性中女性化假设的所有矛盾。在小说中,除了伯爵本人以外的所有吸血鬼都是女性,这些女性所经历的转变主要体现在她们的身体上。在德古拉(Dracula)的饮食行为不仅在美学和文化上变得不可接受,而且变得怪异而怪诞,吸血鬼因此成为维多利亚时代厌食文化的夸张代表,并体现了男性对妇女和饥饿的恐惧。斯托克的讯息似乎是,肉欲的女人不仅性失禁而且致命危险,因此需要纠正-如果不加以彻底消除,则应予以纠正-查看全文下载:“ Taylor&Francis Online”,services_compact:“ citeulike,netvibes,twitter,technorati,delicious,linkedin,facebook,stumbleupon,digg,google,more”,pubid:“ ra-4dff56cd6bb1830b”};添加到候选列表链接永久链接http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09589236.2010.494346

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