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The decadent vampire
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Spatola, Justine J..
The decadent vampire.
Retrieved from
https://doi.org/doi:10.7282/T3WD3ZCZ
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Description
Title
The decadent vampire
Name
Spatola, Justine J. (author)
;
Ledoux, Ellen Malenas (chair)
;
Martin, Timothy (co-chair)
;
Rutgers University
;
Camden Graduate School
Date Created
2012
Other Date
2012-10 (degree)
Subject
English
,
Vampires in literature
,
Decadence (Literary movement)
Extent
iv, 77 p.
Description
John William Polidori published "The Vampyre" in 1819, and, as the first person to author a work of English vampire fiction, he ultimately established the modern image of the aristocratic vampire, which writers such as Bram Stoker later borrowed. The literary vampire, exemplified by Lord Ruthven, reveals the influence of Burkean aesthetics; however, the vampire's portrayal as a degenerate nobleman and his immense popularity with readers also ensured that he would have a tremendous impact on nineteenth century culture. "The Vampyre" foreshadows the more socially-aware Gothic literature of the Victorian period, but the story's glorification of the perverse vampire also presents a challenge to traditional morality. This essay explores the influence of the literary vampire not just on broader aspects of nineteenth century culture but also its influence on the Decadent Movement (focusing on the works of writers such as Charles Baudelaire, Théophile Gautier, and Oscar Wilde) in order to show how it reflects the decadent abnormal. In doing so, however, this essay also questions whether decadence ought to be understood as a nineteenth century European phenomenon, as opposed to a movement that was confined to the late Victorian period; the beliefs shared by decadent writers often originated in Romanticism, and the Romantics' fascination with the supernatural suggests that they were perhaps as interested in perverse themes as the Decadents.
Note
M.A.
Note
Includes bibliographical references
Note
by Justine J. Spatola
Genre
theses, ETD graduate
Persistent URL
https://doi.org/doi:10.7282/T3WD3ZCZ
Language
eng
Collection
Camden Graduate School Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Organization Name
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Rights
The author owns the copyright to this work.
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