Vampires are us : understanding our love affair with the immortal dark side / Margot Adler.

By: Adler, Margot [author.]Material type: TextTextPublisher: San Francisco, CA : Weiser Books, 2014Copyright date: ©2014Description: ix, 237 pages ; 23 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781578635603Subject(s): Vampires in literatureDDC classification: 809.39375 Summary: In a culture that does not do death particularly well, we are obsessed with mortality. Vampires let us play with death and the issue of mortality. They let us ponder what it would mean to be truly long lived. Would the long view allow us to see the world differently, imagine social structures differently? Would it increase or decrease our reverence for the planet? Vampires allow us to ask questions we usually bury. As Adler, a longtime NPR correspondent and question asker, sat vigil at her dying husband's bedside, she found herself newly drawn to vampire novels and their explorations of mortality. Over the next four years -- and more than 270 vampire novels, from teen to adult, from gothic to modern, from detective to comic -- she began to see just how each era creates the vampires it needs. Dracula, an Eastern European monster, was the perfect vehicle for 19th-century England's fear of outsiders and of disease seeping in through its large ports. In 1960s America, Dark Shadows gave us the morally conflicted vampire struggling against his own predatory nature, who still enthralls us today. Think Spike and Angel, Stefan and Damon, Bill and Eric, the Cullens.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
wnor- Book Northam
Northam Adult Nonfiction
809. 39375 ADL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 31111058224799

Includes bibliographical references.

In a culture that does not do death particularly well, we are obsessed with mortality. Vampires let us play with death and the issue of mortality. They let us ponder what it would mean to be truly long lived. Would the long view allow us to see the world differently, imagine social structures differently? Would it increase or decrease our reverence for the planet? Vampires allow us to ask questions we usually bury. As Adler, a longtime NPR correspondent and question asker, sat vigil at her dying husband's bedside, she found herself newly drawn to vampire novels and their explorations of mortality. Over the next four years -- and more than 270 vampire novels, from teen to adult, from gothic to modern, from detective to comic -- she began to see just how each era creates the vampires it needs. Dracula, an Eastern European monster, was the perfect vehicle for 19th-century England's fear of outsiders and of disease seeping in through its large ports. In 1960s America, Dark Shadows gave us the morally conflicted vampire struggling against his own predatory nature, who still enthralls us today. Think Spike and Angel, Stefan and Damon, Bill and Eric, the Cullens.

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