Critical Rhetorical Analysis Of The Article 'Safe Sex: Romancing The Vampire'

626 Words2 Pages

Mariam Abdo
Professor Williams
English 2
5 October 2016

Critical Rhetorical Analysis Essay

Vampires are intriguing mythological figures that are endured in the literature since the eighteenth century but the bloodsucking creatures from then are different from the ones we watch in popular films today. In the past, they were portrayed, as bloodsucking monsters that fed off the lives of helpless humans but today, according to Karen Backstein the modern vampires are made too sexual. In her article “(Un)safe Sex: Romancing the Vampire” Karen Backstein explains how today’s vampires has been drastically altered and they are now too sexual. Because of her credible background of having a PH.D in cinematic studies she does a wonderful job in convincing her audience that movies like Twilight and popular TV shows like True Blood, Vampire Diaries, and Buffy the Vampire Slayer have …show more content…

The article mentions that Victorian vampire stories such as “Dracula,” the heroines were vulnerable and chaste object of desire therefore more likely to surrender to the seduction of dangerous men. However, the modern heroines are in fact the ones calling the shots and they now play the protagonist roles. The modern day vampire gentleman is eerily similar to the old-fashioned bloodsucking vampires; bur the only difference is that he has an impressive display of control. Backstein claims that “in part, the modern vampire story is one about self control about man struggling to master his worst impulses perhaps even his essential mature through whatever means necessary” (212). In other words, the modern vampires are more resourceful. These contemporary vampires are trying to hang onto their humanity and self-control, for example the vampires of the Twilight Saga choose to drink only animal blood although there is a desire to drink human

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