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RSSS 315 Tier 2: Fifth Week Tuesday

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Title: RSSS 315 Tier 2: Fifth Week Tuesday


1
RSSS 315 (Tier 2) Fifth Week (Tuesday)
  • Vampires and Werewolves Slavic Folklore in Our
    Culture

2
Announcements Last Weeks Creatures

3
Types of vampires
  • Folkloric supernatural characteristics, cultural
    variation
  • Psychotic person with mental illness criminally
    attacks victims in the manner of Stokers Dracula
  • Psychic people who feed on others emotionally
  • Literary Stoker has the paradigm

4
Literary vampire
  • Fits needs, desires of the age
  • Fits styles (conventions, tastes) of the age
  • Many other vampires before Stokers

5
Polidoris Vampyre
  • Urbane, sophisticated
  • Gentleman
  • The Vow is the Thing
  • Violence is there, but offstage and understated
  • Is it psychic vampirism?

6
Even before that.
  • Byrons Giaour
  • Goethes Bride of Corinth
  • Burgers Lenore (see first chapter of Dracula)

7
Dealing with Vampires
  • Christian and pagan means
  • Rituals communion (wafers and wine)
  • Symbols crucifixes, holy water
  • Circles and seeds and garlic

8
Evidence of Bogomilism
  • Limited power of Christian symbols
  • Power of Dracula himself (and evil)
  • References to the dark forces

9
Contamination with other traditions, legends
  • Demonic possession
  • Poltergeists and witches

10
Romanticism (early 19th century)
  • Slavic (Russian) Nikolai Gogol
  • Gogols story Vij (1842)
  • 1967 film

11
Story Itself
  • Part of Mirgorod collection
  • Gogol said it was based on folk stories, beliefs
  • No evidence for the claim no Vij (Viy)
  • Witches, sorcerers
  • Connections with religion Khoma relies on
    knowledge not given officially
  • Magic circle pagan, and later Christian

12
Contamination
  • Poltergeist lots of noisemaking
  • Succubus (very close to vampire here)
  • Shape-shifting powers (as other people)
  • Feeding on energies released in sex
  • Repeated visits to victims in dreams
  • Mara death of victim results (usually by
    suffocation here Khoma faints and dies)

13
Story vs. Film
  • Erotic elements stronger
  • Vampire elements stronger

14
Literary Vampires
  • Derived from folk stories
  • Poetry references
  • Other influences late 18th Gothic

15
Gothic Literature
  • 18th Century English
  • Poetry and prose
  • Influential romanticism and modernism

16
Gothic features
  • Mystery, gloom, fog, night, storm
  • Desolation, isolation
  • Animals wolves, bats
  • Distant past (unforgotten) sense of nostalgia
  • Old castles, mansions, graveyards, churches
    (cobwebs, spiders)
  • Mysterious sounds (howling, flapping, scratching)
  • Mysterious figures, secrets, threat of violence
  • Dark colors (black), blood, pale features

17
Later Developments
  • Androgynous heroes (bisexuality)
  • Distinctive music, attire (1980s, 1990s)

18
Goth Culture
19
Background for Stoker
  • Biography 1847-1912
  • Irish college civil servant, journalist, drama
    critic
  • Personal secretary to Henry Irving (actor) in
    England
  • Married, one child
  • Wrote novels and short stories (18 books)
  • Dracula 1897 best known

20
Chapter One
  • Obviously researched
  • Old names Harker does research before leaving
  • Destination
  • Very precisely dated diary entries (in
    shorthand!)
  • Travel early warnings of trouble (peasants
    worried about him)
  • Blue flame everywhere howling of dogs

21
Cultures in contact
  • Ethnographic generalizations
  • Stories along the way I must say they were not
    cheering to me, for amongst them were
    "Ordog"--Satan, "Pokol"--hell, "stregoica"--witch,
    "vrolok" and "vlkoslak"--both mean the same
    thing, one being Slovak and the other Servian for
    something that is either werewolf or vampire.
    (Mem., I must ask the Count about these
    superstitions.)

22
Excerpt
  • Once there appeared a strange optical effect.
    When he stood between me and the flame he did not
    obstruct it, for I could see its ghostly flicker
    all the same. This startled me, but as the effect
    was only momentary, I took it that my eyes
    deceived me straining through the darkness. Then
    for a time there were no blue flames, and we sped
    onwards through the gloom, with the howling of
    the wolves around us, as though they were
    following in a moving circle.

23
Excerpt 2
  • At last there came a time when the driver went
    further afield than he had yet gone, and during
    his absence, the horses began to tremble worse
    than ever and to snort and scream with fright. I
    could not see any cause for it, for the howling
    of the wolves had ceased altogether. But just
    then the moon, sailing through the black clouds,
    appeared behind the jagged crest of a beetling,
    pine-clad rock, and by its light I saw around us
    a ring of wolves, with white teeth and lolling
    red tongues, with long, sinewy limbs and shaggy
    hair. They were a hundred times more terrible in
    the grim silence which held them than even when
    they howled. For myself, I felt a sort of
    paralysis of fear. It is only when a man feels
    himself face to face with such horrors that he
    can understand their true import.

24
Excerpt 3
  • All at once the wolves began to howl as though
    the moonlight had had some peculiar effect on
    them. The horses jumped about and reared, and
    looked helplessly round with eyes that rolled in
    a way painful to see. But the living ring of
    terror encompassed them on every side, and they
    had perforce to remain within it. I called to the
    coachman to come, for it seemed to me that our
    only chance was to try to break out through the
    ring and to aid his approach, I shouted and beat
    the side of the caleche, hoping by the noise to
    scare the wolves from the side, so as to give him
    a chance of reaching the trap. How he came there,
    I know not, but I heard his voice raised in a
    tone of imperious command, and looking towards
    the sound, saw him stand in the roadway. As he
    swept his long arms, as though brushing aside
    some impalpable obstacle, the wolves fell back
    and back further still. Just then a heavy cloud
    passed across the face of the moon, so that we
    were again in darkness.

25
Excerpt 4
  • When I could see again the driver was climbing
    into the caleche, and the wolves disappeared.
    This was all so strange and uncanny that a
    dreadful fear came upon me, and I was afraid to
    speak or move. The time seemed interminable as we
    swept on our way, now in almost complete
    darkness, for the rolling clouds obscured the
    moon.

26
Excerpt 5
  • We kept on ascending, with occasional periods of
    quick descent, but in the main always ascending.
    Suddenly, I became conscious of the fact that the
    driver was in the act of pulling up the horses in
    the courtyard of a vast ruined castle, from whose
    tall black windows came no ray of light, and
    whose broken battlements showed a jagged line
    against the sky.

27
Vampire Epidemics 17th and 18th Centuries
  • Hungary?
  • South Slavic areas?
  • Romania and Albania?

28
Key Works
  • Dom Augustin Calmet 16721757
  • French biblical scholar, a Benedictine abbot at
    Nancy and Sens
  • Major work Dissertations sur les Apparitions
    des Anges, des Démons et des Esprits et sur les
    revenants et vampires de Hongrie, de Bohême, de
    Moravie, e de Silésie, Paris, 1740

29
Erzsébet Bathory
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