Dracula by Bram Stoker

1158 Words3 Pages

Throughout the Victorian era, a woman’s sole purpose was to marry, produce children, keep the house clean and have dinner on the table by the time their husband returned from work. They were restricted to working tedious jobs at minimum wage until they were married and were not allowed to receive a real education. Once married, a woman was expected to become a fulltime mother and house wife tending to the needs in the home on command. All these lovely skills were that of the traditional Victorian women. They were pressured to express their femininity through their dainty attire, gentle mothering, social order and expressing the manners and obedience that was expected of them. All in all it was required that they be as little of an individual as possible. With the rising of the ‘New Woman’, not only did it challenge the traditional traits of the suppressed Victorian female, but it gave power to women in a male dominant society to become what ever she wanted. Throughout Bram Stokers classic novel ‘Dracula’, we can see the prime and accepted theme of the traditional Victorian women as it battles with the new and rising theme of the ‘New Woman.’ Mina Harker (Murray), Lucy Westendra and the death of Count Dracula all aid the theme of the ‘New Women’ in their own way yet are all brought to their conclusive demise.
In the beginning of the novel Mina Harker, the wife of Jonathan Harker, is an aspiring ‘New Woman’ in the Victorian Era. She states in a letter to Lucy that she is an assistant schoolmistress and that she has been practicing her short hand and typewriting skills. Along with the ideology of the ‘New Woman’ she strives to follow in the footsteps of “Lady Journalists” by writing in a journal daily about what ever she sees fit an...

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...her from her newfound traits and allowing her to fall back into the suppressed nature in which the Victorian woman was expected to act.
With male supremacy over powering the new femininity, the battle is lost in Stokers classic novel ‘Dracula’. Women resume their role as the traditional house wife and mother that society has crowned them to be, whilst men still rein in their ability to suppress the female mind. With Mina’s unsuccessful attempt at being a ‘New Woman’ individual, Lucy’s ultimate demise and Count Dracula’s termination by a knife to the throat and a stab through the heart, we can see that the theme of the ‘New Woman’ not only rises throughout the novel, but is also inevitably brought back to the conventional and traditional characteristics of the Victorian Woman.

Works Cited

Stoker, Bram. Dracula. Ed. Glennis Byron. Peterborough, ON: Broadview, 1998.

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