Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series Editor's Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: the Lady Audley Paradigm
- Part I Gothic Mutations
- 1 Displacing the Gothic in Lady Audley's Secret
- 2 John Marchmont's Legacy and the Topologies of Dispossession
- 3 Reading between the (Blood)lines of Victorian Vampires: ‘Good Lady Ducayne’
- Part II Darwinian Detections
- Part III Victorian Realisms
- Bibliography
- Index
3 - Reading between the (Blood)lines of Victorian Vampires: ‘Good Lady Ducayne’
from Part I - Gothic Mutations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series Editor's Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: the Lady Audley Paradigm
- Part I Gothic Mutations
- 1 Displacing the Gothic in Lady Audley's Secret
- 2 John Marchmont's Legacy and the Topologies of Dispossession
- 3 Reading between the (Blood)lines of Victorian Vampires: ‘Good Lady Ducayne’
- Part II Darwinian Detections
- Part III Victorian Realisms
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Although they are considered an enduring species, vampires do not scare people any more the way they did in the past, probably because the contemporary world has replaced their outmoded look – made up of sharp teeth, dark robes, pallid faces and foreign-sounding accents – with more terrifying realities. What is indisputable is their capacity to survive and to adapt, in almost Darwinian terms, to a society which always needs menacing and vampirising ‘others’ to haunt its institutions and its (presumably) advanced civilisation. In this view, Nina Auerbach's definition of the ‘children of the night’ seems appropriate: ‘an alien nocturnal species, sleeping in coffins, living in shadows, drinking our lives in secrecy, vampires are easy to stereotype, but it is their variety that makes them survivors’. Rather than being unchanging creatures, vampires have undergone a slow evolution from scary ‘myths’ to mutating ‘tropes’, with the latter term intended in the double meaning of rhetorical figure (connected to the way vampires have been textually inscribed and described) and ideological strategy, referring to the modalities according to which these creatures have become an expression of the ‘political unconscious’ of society.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- In Lady Audley's ShadowMary Elizabeth Braddon and Victorian Literary Genres, pp. 60 - 76Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2010