Dracula, A Longman Cutural Edition, 1st edition

Published by Pearson (October 10, 2010) © 2011

  • Bram Stoker
  • Andrew Elfenbein University of Minnesota
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From Longman's Cultural Edition series, this new edition of Dracula, edited by Andrew Elfenbein, recovers the cultural complexity of Bram Stoker's tale and offers a wide array of contextualizing documents, including contemporary reviews and articles about Eastern Europe, science, gender, and media. 

From Twilight to True Blood, no creation from the British 1890s has a larger profile in contemporary culture than Dracula.  Rather than tracing Dracula through all his later incarnations, this edition offers ways to understand the late Victorian origins of Bram Stoker’s remarkable book.  While Dracula never simply reflects contemporary trends, reading it with knowledge of contemporary events and debates can clarify what may otherwise seem puzzling. Throughout, Stoker emphasizes that his vampire story takes place not in a hazy, fictional past, but in a sharply realized England of the 1890s. The materials in the sections of Cultural Contexts illuminate the references to Victorian culture in Stoker’s version of this seemingly timeless story.  

Handsomely produced and affordably priced, the Longman Cultural Editions series presents classic works in provocative and illuminating contexts-cultural, critical, and literary. Each Cultural Edition consists of the complete texts of important literary works, reliably edited, headed by an inviting introduction, and supplemented by helpful annotations; a table of dates to track its composition, publication, and public reception in relation to biographical, cultural and historical events; and a guide for further inquiry and study.

For a complete list of Longman Cultural Editions, visit www.pearsonhighered.com.


 

List of Illustrations

About This Edition

Introduction

Table of Dates

Dracula (1897)

Appendix: “Dracula’s Guest”

Contexts

Victorian Reviews of Dracula

The Athenaeum

Belfast News-Letter

The Bookman

Daily News

The Era

Freeman’s Journal and Daily Commercial Advertiser

Hampshire Telegraph and Sussex Chronicle

Lloyd’s Weekly Newspaper

National Magazine

New York Tribune

Pall Mall Gazette

The Spectator

Times (London)

Times (Washington)

Eastern Europe

Charles Boner, from Transylvania: Its Products and its People

Edmund Cecil Johnson, from On the Track of the Crescent: Erratic Notes from Piraeus to Pesth

Emily Gerard, from “Transylvanian Superstitions”

Gender

[Anon.], from “The Age of Woman”

Sarah Grand. From “The Modern Girl”

Science

Max Nordau, from Degeneration.

Havelock Ellis, from The Criminal

Daniel Hack Tuke, from Sleep-Walking and Hypnotism

William Aitken, from The Science and Practice of Medicine

Media

James L. Andem, from A Practical Guide to the Use of the Edison Phonograph

C. L. McCluer Stevens, from “The Evolution of the Typewriter”

Thomas Allen Reed, from A Biography of Isaac Pitman (Inventor of Phonography)

Works Cited in the Notes

Further Reading and Viewing

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