Representation Of Vampires In Pop Culture

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Countess Elizabeth Bathory of Transylvania was tried in 1611 for the murders of over 650 young women, whose’ blood she would drink and bathe in because she believed that it maintained her youth. She in one of the most infamous examples of a vampirist, or “real life vampire”; these people have mental disorders that cause them to have a vampire-like craving for blood. The idea of vampires has been around for centuries. Over the years pop culture’s representation of them has greatly changed what we think of as a vampire. The modern representation of vampires is barely recognizable as their original forms.The vampire has gone from a grotesque, silent creature of the night to a man with slicked back hair and a Transylvanian accent to a moody boy who sparkles in the sunlight. …show more content…

Although every culture has a different idea of how vampires look; they all share a theme: they are manifestations of fear and horror. From the soucouyants in Trinidad, to Ch’ing Shih in China, to Ciuatetteos in the Aztec empire mentions of vampires are seen all over the world. The most essential part of the vampire is the biting of an object and the sucking of its blood or life force. Vampires are seen as both male and female and they are seen as everything from inhuman, hideous demon-like creatures to attractive spirits who use their looks to lure their victims away so they can suck their blood. The modern vampire is seen as much more attractive and human looking. Dracula has popularized the image of the “classic” vampire: slicked back dark hair, fangs, dark and formal clothes, etc… The appearances of vampires have become much different from how the lore that they came from described them

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