Difference between revisions of "Dracula (Bram Stoker, 1897)"
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+ | Bram Stoker. Dracula. Pub. 1897. Ed. Maurice Hindle. Penguin Classics, 2003. | ||
+ | |||
+ | *Pub 1 vol by Constable | ||
+ | * Good for: complex representation of narrative as multimedia, as archive 21 (tension btwn two), 68, 120, 130, 146, 194, 202, 237, 304, 356, 402 (accuracy/truth vs. contingency and fragility of memory, and narrative) ; also worth thinking about this narrative in terms of the more outward-looking foreign policy of the 80s and 90s (cf. Kucich's intro to Victorian novel handbook), a geopolitical shift you start seeing in [[The Way We Live Now (Trollope, 1875)]]; 205, 123 Victorian modernity of international travel, expanding on the sensation novel of a generation previous ([[Lady Audley's Secret (ME Braddon, 1862)]], [[Armadale (Collins, 1866)]]); Mina as secretary (relating back to [[Middlemarch (Eliot, 1872)]], [[Cranford (Gaskell, 1853)]], [[New Grub Street (Gissing, 1891)]]); | ||
+ | |||
==General Notes== | ==General Notes== | ||
*Types of documents: journal, diary, letters, telegrams, phonographs, photographs, newspaper clippings -> Dracula as archive | *Types of documents: journal, diary, letters, telegrams, phonographs, photographs, newspaper clippings -> Dracula as archive | ||
Line 11: | Line 16: | ||
**281 Sam Bloxam describes him as older again | **281 Sam Bloxam describes him as older again | ||
**300 ''en deshabille'' in Harkers' room | **300 ''en deshabille'' in Harkers' room | ||
+ | **305 Mina's description | ||
+ | **337 sailors' description | ||
+ | **370 "queer lookin' old man" | ||
+ | **400 final, fearsome description | ||
*26 dracula's English library | *26 dracula's English library | ||
*30 per penguin note, Harker's Kodak camera puts the narration at least in 1888 | *30 per penguin note, Harker's Kodak camera puts the narration at least in 1888 | ||
Line 24: | Line 33: | ||
*66 Desdemona - Shakespeare's Othello | *66 Desdemona - Shakespeare's Othello | ||
*68 seward's diary kept on phonograph - novel gesturing toward multimedia | *68 seward's diary kept on phonograph - novel gesturing toward multimedia | ||
+ | *69 how came renfield to seward's sanitorium? Within the gothic storyworld the most far fetched thing seems to be that the sanitorium and Carfax should be next to each other | ||
*70 Scott marmion whitby | *70 Scott marmion whitby | ||
*120 how the mental capacity for memory, especially of those like Harker and Lucy who are under Dracula's power, is so tenuous and incomplete compared to their hysteria, but the formal multimedia archive seems to offer a complete picture of the events. It is an archive of mental states and events that are beyond the capacity for the realist novel to contain and manage. Is this thematic patterning and the formal patterning then somehow at odds? | *120 how the mental capacity for memory, especially of those like Harker and Lucy who are under Dracula's power, is so tenuous and incomplete compared to their hysteria, but the formal multimedia archive seems to offer a complete picture of the events. It is an archive of mental states and events that are beyond the capacity for the realist novel to contain and manage. Is this thematic patterning and the formal patterning then somehow at odds? | ||
Line 38: | Line 48: | ||
*184 Dracula on London st during day | *184 Dracula on London st during day | ||
*186-7 VH on "King Laugh" | *186-7 VH on "King Laugh" | ||
− | *189 "bloofer lady" (beautiful) ref to Our Mutual Friend bk 2 ch 9 | + | *189 "bloofer lady" (beautiful) ref to [[Our Mutual Friend (Dickens, 1865]] bk 2 ch 9 |
*191 Mina wondering about the veracity of JH's written record | *191 Mina wondering about the veracity of JH's written record | ||
*194 again Mina says she wants to record her meeting with VH "verbatim" -- the representational pressure of technological modernity (?) | *194 again Mina says she wants to record her meeting with VH "verbatim" -- the representational pressure of technological modernity (?) | ||
*200-1 VH's letter as having curative powers for JH's doubt | *200-1 VH's letter as having curative powers for JH's doubt | ||
*202 Westminster Gazette, which Jonathan knew "by the colour" -- '''what color was it?!''' | *202 Westminster Gazette, which Jonathan knew "by the colour" -- '''what color was it?!''' | ||
+ | ** "Westminster Gazette (1893-1928) Founded by George Newnes, the ''Westminster Gazette'' was a 'clubland' 1d evening daily, politically liberal and '''printed on green paper''', known as the 'pea-green incorruptible'." (Brake and DeMoor, eds, ''Dictionary of C19 Journalism'', British Library, 2009) | ||
*204-6 VH's critique of scientific positivism and the faith we put in it (I'm not sure his reasoning would hold up to much examination) | *204-6 VH's critique of scientific positivism and the faith we put in it (I'm not sure his reasoning would hold up to much examination) | ||
*205 Victorians' sense of their own historical modernity: | *205 Victorians' sense of their own historical modernity: | ||
'Good God, Professor!' I [Seward] said, starting up. 'Do you mean to tell me that Lucy was bitten by such a bat; and that such a thing is '''here in London in the nineteenth century'''?' | 'Good God, Professor!' I [Seward] said, starting up. 'Do you mean to tell me that Lucy was bitten by such a bat; and that such a thing is '''here in London in the nineteenth century'''?' | ||
− | *213 seeing l in the tomb -- "are you convinced | + | *213 seeing l in the tomb -- "are you convinced now" |
*237 "that is a wonderful machine, but it is cruelly true." Mina on the phonograph | *237 "that is a wonderful machine, but it is cruelly true." Mina on the phonograph | ||
*252ff explication of vampires | *252ff explication of vampires | ||
Line 56: | Line 67: | ||
**perhaps to account for the conditions leading to her being vamped by Dracula | **perhaps to account for the conditions leading to her being vamped by Dracula | ||
*293 "let me put down with exactness all that happened" -- in a highly neurotic narrative this is one of the most recurrent neuroses | *293 "let me put down with exactness all that happened" -- in a highly neurotic narrative this is one of the most recurrent neuroses | ||
+ | *304 all the Ms. and phonographs burned by Dracula | ||
+ | *312-3 vh's strange story about the illegal auction performed by a burglar: it is odd but seems to tangle objects, duplicity, capital, commodities together Ina suggestive way | ||
+ | *322 dracula's advanced knowledge but subpar memory, according to vh | ||
+ | *331-2 hypnotizing Mina to get at her idea, again memory is so tenuous | ||
+ | * 336 a greater sense of reality coming from rereading diaries, says harker | ||
+ | *350 Harker wants Seward to keep "an exact record" | ||
+ | *354 one of the only (if not only) times we are aware of the fact that seward's account is recorded audio transcript is when he is overcome with emotion here | ||
+ | ** again memory overwhelming the exact record | ||
+ | * 356 powering toward the conclusion the narrative becomes syncopated by the telegrams, urging the reader on | ||
+ | *381 striking for the reader and for Jonathan in such an "in touch" text to have the others of the group out of touch | ||
+ | *377 Mina hesitates to write: "the...the...the...Vampire. (Why did I hesitate to write the word?)" | ||
+ | *401 "the whole body crumbled into dust" | ||
+ | *402 ending on documentary evidence | ||
+ | I took the papers from the safe where they have been ever since our return so long ago [7 years]. We were struck with the fact that, in all the mass of material of which the record is composed, there is hardly one authentic [i.e., handwritten?] document; nothing but a mass of type-writing, except the later notebooks of Mina and Seward and myself [Harker], and VH's memorandum. We could hardly ask anyone, even did we wish to, to accept these as proofs of so wild a story. Van Helsing summed it all up as he said, with our boy on his knee: - "We want no proofs; we ask none to believe us!" | ||
==Theme Tracking== | ==Theme Tracking== | ||
===Narrated reading/writing === | ===Narrated reading/writing === | ||
As opposed to narrational writing, which is the whole framing form | As opposed to narrational writing, which is the whole framing form | ||
+ | |||
+ | *7 BM | ||
+ | *8 superstitions | ||
+ | *9 old missals simile | ||
+ | *10 Dracula letter | ||
+ | *11 | ||
+ | *21 tension between novel chapters and narrative forms | ||
+ | *24 | ||
+ | *26-7 Dracula' English library | ||
+ | *29 Bradshaw | ||
+ | *31 England maps | ||
+ | *37 legal exams | ||
+ | *39 forced to write letters | ||
+ | *40 " | ||
+ | *44 | ||
+ | *49 | ||
+ | *50 | ||
+ | *51 Harker papers confiscated | ||
+ | *62 Mina discusses her diary | ||
+ | *67 | ||
+ | *70 | ||
+ | *72 Mina writing in whitby churchyard | ||
+ | *73 | ||
+ | *74 Mr Swales "printin lies" | ||
+ | *78 renfield's notebook | ||
+ | *79 " | ||
+ | *80 Mina soothing diary | ||
+ | *82 m knows j's writing | ||
+ | *84 | ||
+ | *90 captain with message in bottle | ||
+ | *99 new woman novels | ||
+ | *104 Mina writing on east cliff again | ||
+ | *108 and again | ||
+ | *109 nun letter | ||
+ | *111 renfield Notebook | ||
+ | *115 j gives m his diary | ||
+ | *118 Disraeli | ||
+ | *119 | ||
+ | *121 | ||
+ | *126 | ||
+ | *130 | ||
+ | *131 | ||
+ | *134 | ||
+ | *141 | ||
+ | *142 | ||
+ | *150 | ||
+ | *151 picture-wolves | ||
+ | *152 van h's late telegram | ||
+ | *155 | ||
+ | *160 Lucy's paper | ||
+ | *163 | ||
+ | *164 | ||
+ | *169 | ||
+ | *174 | ||
+ | *175 | ||
+ | *178 willing everything to Arthur | ||
+ | *182 | ||
+ | *191 Mina reading j's journal | ||
+ | *192 | ||
+ | *193 | ||
+ | *194 Mina journalism | ||
+ | *195 | ||
+ | *196 VH says Mina's paper is as sunshine | ||
+ | *199 VH reads j's diary | ||
+ | *200 Jonathan resumes diary | ||
+ | *201 | ||
+ | *202 Westminster gazette / Seward picks up journal again | ||
+ | *203 Westminster | ||
+ | *207 Byron | ||
+ | *217 VH directs Seward to read the papers | ||
+ | *230 VH reading missal in Lucy's tomb | ||
+ | *233 typewritten copies | ||
+ | *234 Mina's typewriter | ||
+ | *236 | ||
+ | *237 Seward reading j's diary | ||
+ | *238 Mina transcribing seward's journal | ||
+ | *239 " / Seward keeps his newspapers | ||
+ | *240 Mina collating | ||
+ | *241 Harker gets papers about dracula's boxes | ||
+ | *242 lawyers' day book and letter book | ||
+ | *243 j and m put all papers in order | ||
+ | *244 " | ||
+ | *246 manuscript | ||
+ | *251 Mina secretary | ||
+ | *252-3 explanation of vampires, proofs, records of past | ||
+ | *256 arminius making record in Budapest | ||
+ | *264 Mina collating appreciated | ||
+ | |||
===Materiality=== | ===Materiality=== | ||
Latest revision as of 15:49, 10 April 2018
Bram Stoker. Dracula. Pub. 1897. Ed. Maurice Hindle. Penguin Classics, 2003.
- Pub 1 vol by Constable
- Good for: complex representation of narrative as multimedia, as archive 21 (tension btwn two), 68, 120, 130, 146, 194, 202, 237, 304, 356, 402 (accuracy/truth vs. contingency and fragility of memory, and narrative) ; also worth thinking about this narrative in terms of the more outward-looking foreign policy of the 80s and 90s (cf. Kucich's intro to Victorian novel handbook), a geopolitical shift you start seeing in The Way We Live Now (Trollope, 1875); 205, 123 Victorian modernity of international travel, expanding on the sensation novel of a generation previous (Lady Audley's Secret (ME Braddon, 1862), Armadale (Collins, 1866)); Mina as secretary (relating back to Middlemarch (Eliot, 1872), Cranford (Gaskell, 1853), New Grub Street (Gissing, 1891));
Contents
General Notes
- Types of documents: journal, diary, letters, telegrams, phonographs, photographs, newspaper clippings -> Dracula as archive
- it's hard to tell at a glance but it appears that in the late c19 Romania was an independent kingdom but Transylvania as a region was part of Austria-Hungary until WWI - cf Wiki Lands of the Crown of St Stephen
- also worth thinking about this narrative in terms of the more outward-looking foreign policy of the 80s and 90s (cf. Kucich's intro to Victorian novel handbook)
- 11 he's pretty anxious from the get go
- 21 tension btwn novel form and narrative form ("ch 2" / "JH's journal (cont.)")
- 22, 24 descriptions of the count's appearance,
- 59 younger,
- 148,
- 184 JH sees him in London looking young,
- 281 Sam Bloxam describes him as older again
- 300 en deshabille in Harkers' room
- 305 Mina's description
- 337 sailors' description
- 370 "queer lookin' old man"
- 400 final, fearsome description
- 26 dracula's English library
- 30 per penguin note, Harker's Kodak camera puts the narration at least in 1888
- 32-3 no reflection and the incident with H's razor
- 41 Dracula climbing the wall
- 43 Hamlet -- not even a complete ref to Shakespeare, familiarity is assumed (and fits with journal form too)
- 44-6 the count's 3 women
- 52 count dresses as harker
- 53 embodied dust motes/hypnotism, again on 154
- 57 allusion to Pope's translation of Homer
- 61 "Mina is a woman, and there is nought in common." Isn't there?
- 62 Mina as New Woman (or influenced by them as she states herself)
- 66 Desdemona - Shakespeare's Othello
- 68 seward's diary kept on phonograph - novel gesturing toward multimedia
- 69 how came renfield to seward's sanitorium? Within the gothic storyworld the most far fetched thing seems to be that the sanitorium and Carfax should be next to each other
- 70 Scott marmion whitby
- 120 how the mental capacity for memory, especially of those like Harker and Lucy who are under Dracula's power, is so tenuous and incomplete compared to their hysteria, but the formal multimedia archive seems to offer a complete picture of the events. It is an archive of mental states and events that are beyond the capacity for the realist novel to contain and manage. Is this thematic patterning and the formal patterning then somehow at odds?
- 121 Seward says "I had better tell you exactly what happened" as did harker and Mina, again on 143
- 123 speed of international travel, Van Helssing from Amsterdam overnight, Mina to Hamburg then Budapest quite quickly
- 130 van helsing: knowledge stronger than memory -- tie to textuality/media?
- 146 Pall Mall gazette - add periodical to list of media forms
- 152 "the blood is the life" and then Van H's late telegram (a modern version of the lost letter trope from naturalism/melodrama)
- 154 again the pillar of dust, this time compared to African "simoom"
- 168 the laborers' "dusty" work bringing the boxes of earth to Carfax
- " Mina is an orphan?
- 173 Thomas Hood
- 175 Byron
- 184 Dracula on London st during day
- 186-7 VH on "King Laugh"
- 189 "bloofer lady" (beautiful) ref to Our Mutual Friend (Dickens, 1865 bk 2 ch 9
- 191 Mina wondering about the veracity of JH's written record
- 194 again Mina says she wants to record her meeting with VH "verbatim" -- the representational pressure of technological modernity (?)
- 200-1 VH's letter as having curative powers for JH's doubt
- 202 Westminster Gazette, which Jonathan knew "by the colour" -- what color was it?!
- "Westminster Gazette (1893-1928) Founded by George Newnes, the Westminster Gazette was a 'clubland' 1d evening daily, politically liberal and printed on green paper, known as the 'pea-green incorruptible'." (Brake and DeMoor, eds, Dictionary of C19 Journalism, British Library, 2009)
- 204-6 VH's critique of scientific positivism and the faith we put in it (I'm not sure his reasoning would hold up to much examination)
- 205 Victorians' sense of their own historical modernity:
'Good God, Professor!' I [Seward] said, starting up. 'Do you mean to tell me that Lucy was bitten by such a bat; and that such a thing is here in London in the nineteenth century?'
- 213 seeing l in the tomb -- "are you convinced now"
- 237 "that is a wonderful machine, but it is cruelly true." Mina on the phonograph
- 252ff explication of vampires
- 264 "an indexy kind of way"?
- 268 "an accurate examination of the place"
- 284 Aerated Bread Company - chain of tea rooms
- 287 VH wants "accurate knowledge of all details"
- 291 why are they at such pains to mention/narrate Mina's exclusion? Harker and Seward both
- perhaps to account for the conditions leading to her being vamped by Dracula
- 293 "let me put down with exactness all that happened" -- in a highly neurotic narrative this is one of the most recurrent neuroses
- 304 all the Ms. and phonographs burned by Dracula
- 312-3 vh's strange story about the illegal auction performed by a burglar: it is odd but seems to tangle objects, duplicity, capital, commodities together Ina suggestive way
- 322 dracula's advanced knowledge but subpar memory, according to vh
- 331-2 hypnotizing Mina to get at her idea, again memory is so tenuous
- 336 a greater sense of reality coming from rereading diaries, says harker
- 350 Harker wants Seward to keep "an exact record"
- 354 one of the only (if not only) times we are aware of the fact that seward's account is recorded audio transcript is when he is overcome with emotion here
- again memory overwhelming the exact record
- 356 powering toward the conclusion the narrative becomes syncopated by the telegrams, urging the reader on
- 381 striking for the reader and for Jonathan in such an "in touch" text to have the others of the group out of touch
- 377 Mina hesitates to write: "the...the...the...Vampire. (Why did I hesitate to write the word?)"
- 401 "the whole body crumbled into dust"
- 402 ending on documentary evidence
I took the papers from the safe where they have been ever since our return so long ago [7 years]. We were struck with the fact that, in all the mass of material of which the record is composed, there is hardly one authentic [i.e., handwritten?] document; nothing but a mass of type-writing, except the later notebooks of Mina and Seward and myself [Harker], and VH's memorandum. We could hardly ask anyone, even did we wish to, to accept these as proofs of so wild a story. Van Helsing summed it all up as he said, with our boy on his knee: - "We want no proofs; we ask none to believe us!"
Theme Tracking
Narrated reading/writing
As opposed to narrational writing, which is the whole framing form
- 7 BM
- 8 superstitions
- 9 old missals simile
- 10 Dracula letter
- 11
- 21 tension between novel chapters and narrative forms
- 24
- 26-7 Dracula' English library
- 29 Bradshaw
- 31 England maps
- 37 legal exams
- 39 forced to write letters
- 40 "
- 44
- 49
- 50
- 51 Harker papers confiscated
- 62 Mina discusses her diary
- 67
- 70
- 72 Mina writing in whitby churchyard
- 73
- 74 Mr Swales "printin lies"
- 78 renfield's notebook
- 79 "
- 80 Mina soothing diary
- 82 m knows j's writing
- 84
- 90 captain with message in bottle
- 99 new woman novels
- 104 Mina writing on east cliff again
- 108 and again
- 109 nun letter
- 111 renfield Notebook
- 115 j gives m his diary
- 118 Disraeli
- 119
- 121
- 126
- 130
- 131
- 134
- 141
- 142
- 150
- 151 picture-wolves
- 152 van h's late telegram
- 155
- 160 Lucy's paper
- 163
- 164
- 169
- 174
- 175
- 178 willing everything to Arthur
- 182
- 191 Mina reading j's journal
- 192
- 193
- 194 Mina journalism
- 195
- 196 VH says Mina's paper is as sunshine
- 199 VH reads j's diary
- 200 Jonathan resumes diary
- 201
- 202 Westminster gazette / Seward picks up journal again
- 203 Westminster
- 207 Byron
- 217 VH directs Seward to read the papers
- 230 VH reading missal in Lucy's tomb
- 233 typewritten copies
- 234 Mina's typewriter
- 236
- 237 Seward reading j's diary
- 238 Mina transcribing seward's journal
- 239 " / Seward keeps his newspapers
- 240 Mina collating
- 241 Harker gets papers about dracula's boxes
- 242 lawyers' day book and letter book
- 243 j and m put all papers in order
- 244 "
- 246 manuscript
- 251 Mina secretary
- 252-3 explanation of vampires, proofs, records of past
- 256 arminius making record in Budapest
- 264 Mina collating appreciated
Materiality
Technology
Information, communication, else
States of consciousness
Nation/Empire
History
Shakespeare References
- they are usually narrated by Seward it seems
- 43 Hamlet's tablets
- 66 desdemona
- 73 sir oracle midsummer dream
- 78 hamlet method
- 240 Lear that way madness lies
- 286 Renfield's Malvolio smile (twelfth night) (Seward)
- 287 hamlet "cruel to be kind" (Seward)
- 288 Lear "rats and mice and such small deer" (renfield)