Subject: Languages and literature
Year: 2025
Type: Article
Type: PeerReviewed
Title: Perception, Rationality and Corruption in Bram Stoker’s Dracula
Author: Pop Zarieva, Natalija
Author: Iliev, Krste
Abstract: Bram Stoker's Dracula utilizes ocular imagery as a potent symbolic device, exploring the complex intersections of good and evil, perception and reality, and the seductive yet destructive nature of power. This paper aims to analyze the function of the eye motif within the novel, arguing that it serves not only to delineate character transformations and moral states but also to expose a profound epistemological anxiety prevalent in Victorian society. Specifically, this study will investigate how Stoker employs the visual realm to interrogate the reliability of perception, the boundaries between the self and the other, and the very nature of truth in the face of the uncanny. By examining the recurring motif of the gaze, this paper seeks to demonstrate how Dracula constructs a world where the act of seeing, and being seen, becomes a site of struggle, control, and potential corruption. Furthermore, we will consider how the visual language of Dracula reflects and reinforces Victorian cultural anxieties surrounding female sexuality, particularly in relation to the perceived threat of female agency and the blurring of boundaries between purity and corruption. Ultimately, this study aims to demonstrate that the pervasive use of ocular imagery in Dracula is not merely decorative but rather a crucial element in the novel's exploration of epistemological uncertainty and the precarious nature of human understanding in a world grappling with the liminal and the monstrous.
Publisher: MNFR
Relation: https://eprints.ugd.edu.mk/36277/
Identifier: oai:eprints.ugd.edu.mk:36277
Identifier: https://eprints.ugd.edu.mk/36277/1/17398%20%281%29.pdfIdentifier: Pop Zarieva, Natalija and Iliev, Krste (2025) Perception, Rationality and Corruption in Bram Stoker’s Dracula. International Journal of Sciences: Basic and Applied Research (IJSBAR), 77 (1). pp. 9-21. ISSN 2307-4531