Bram Stoker

(1847-1912)

Internet Resources: Dracula’s Home Page

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ALEXANDER, Bryan. “Dracula and the Gothic Imagination of War.” Journal of Dracula Studies 3 (2002): 15-23.

ANDERSON, Mark. “The Shadow of the Modern: Gothic Ghosts in Stoker’s Dracula .” (382-98). In Literary Paternity: Literary Friendship, ed. Gerhard Richter. Chapel Hill. NC: University of North Carolina Press. 2002.

ARATA, S.D. “The Occidental Tourist: Dracula and the Anxiety of Reverse Colonization.” [GGII: 0708].

ARTER, Janice. Feminist Reflections on Stoker’s Heroines. [GGII: 0709].

ASTLE, Richard S. “Dracula as Totemic Monster: Lacan, Freud, Oedipus and History.” [GGI: 1214].

AUERBACH, Nina. “My Vampire, My Friend: The Intimacy Dracula Destroyed” (11-16). In Blood Read: The Vampire as Metaphor in Contemporary Literature, eds. Joan Gordon, Veronica Hollinger, Brian Aldiss. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1997.

AUERBACH, Nina. “Dracula Keeps Rising from the Grave” (23-27). In Dracula: The Shade and the Shadow: A Critical Anthology, ed.  Elizabeth Miller. Westcliffe-on-sea, Essex, UK: Desert Island Books, 1998. On the television adaptation by Gabrielle Beaumont.

AYLES, Daphne. “The Two Worlds of Bram Stoker.” [GGI: 1215].

BELFORD, Barbara. Bram Stoker: A Biography of the Author of Dracula. New York: Knopf, 1996.

BENTLEY, C.F. “The Monster in the Bedroom: Sexual Symbolism in Bram Stoker’s Dracula.” [GGI: 1216].

BIERMAN, Joseph. “Dracula, Prolonged Childhood Illness, and the Oral Triad.” [GGI: 1217].

BIERMAN, Joseph. “The Genesis and Dating of Dracula from Bram Stoker’s Working Notes.” [GGI: 1218].

BIGNELL, Jonathan. “A Taste of the Gothic: Film and Television Versions of Dracula ” (114-30). In The Classic Novel: From Page to Screen, eds.  Robert Giddings and Erica Sheen. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2000.

BLINDERMAN, Charles S. “Vampurella: Darwin and Count Dracula.” [GGI: 1219].

BOTTING, Fred. “Dracula, Romance and the Radcliffean Gothic.” Women’s Writing 1:2 (1994): 181-201.

BRADLEY, Marion Zimmer. “Believeability in Dra-cula.” NIEKAS 45: Essays on Dark Fantasy. Center Harbor, NH: Niekas Publications, 1998, 33, 43. 

BRAUN, Anne-Kathrin. “From Page to Stage: Narrative Strategies in Lochhead’s Dracula.” Gothic Studies 3 (2001): 196-210.

BREDEROO, N.J. “Dracula in Film” (171-81). In Exhibited by Candlelight: Sources and Developments in the Gothic Tradition, eds. Valeria Tinkler Viviani, Peter Davidson and Jane Stevenson. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1995.

BRENNAN, Matthew C. “Repression, Knowledge, and Saving Souls: The Role of the ’New Woman.’” In Stoker’s Dracula and Murnau’s Nosferatu. [GGII: 0710].

BREUER, Horst. “Dracula lebt: Zur Psychodynamik von Schreckenliteratur” (23-27). In Unterhaltung: Sozial und Literaturwissen-schaftliche Beitrage zu ihren Formen un Funktionen. Erlangen: Univ. Erlangen Nurnberg, 1994. [Dracula lives: On the psychodynamic of terror literature].

BYERS, Thomas B. “Good Men and Monsters: The Defenses of Dracula.” [GGII: 0711].

BYRON, Glennis, ed. Dracula: Bram Stoker. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1999.

BYRON, Glennis. “Bram Stoker's Gothic and the Resources of Science.” Critical Survey 19:2 (2007): 48-62. [GGIV: 0000].

CARLSEN, M. M. “What Stoker Saw: An Introduction to the Literary Vampire.” [GGI: 1220].

CAIN, Jimmie E. Bram Stoker and Russophobia: Evidence of the British Fear of Russia in Dracula and The Lady of the Shroud. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2006.

CARTER, Margaret L. Dracula: The Vampire and the Critics. [GGII: 0712].

CHELMINSKI, Rudy. “The Curse of Count Dracula.“ Smithsonian 34:1 (2003): 110-15.

CLARK, Damion. “Preying on the Pervert: The Uses of Homosexual Panic in Bram Stoker’s Dracula” (167-176). In Horrifying Sex: Essays on Sexual Difference in Gothic Literature, ed. Ruth Bienstock Anolik. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2007.

CLEMENTS, William M. “Formula as Genre in Popular Horror Literature.” [GGI: 1221].

COATS, Daryl R. “Bram Stoker and the Ambiguity of Identity.” [GGII: 0713].

CRAFT, Christopher. “‘Kiss Me with those Red Lips’: Gender and Inversion in Bram Stoker’s Dracula.” [GGII: 0715].

CROLEY, Laura Sagolla. “The Rhetoric of Reform in Stoker’s Dracula: Depravity, Decline, and the Fin de Siècle ’Residuum.’“ Criticism 37 (1995): 85-108

CROSSEN, John F. “The Stake That Spoke: Vlad Dracula and the Medieval Gospel of Violence” (180-91). In Dracula: The Shade and the Shadow, ed. Elizabeth Miller. Westcliffe-on-sea, Essex, UK: Desert Island Books, 1998.

CUSICK, Edmund. “Stoker’s Languages of the Supernatural: A Jungian Approach to the Novels” (140-49). In Gothick Origins and Innovations. eds. Victor Sage and Allan Lloyd Smith. Amsterdam; Atlanta, Georgia: Rodopi; Costerus New Series 91, 1994.

DALY, Nicholas. “Dracula and the Rise of Professionalism.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 39 (1997): 181-203.

DANIELS, Les. “Bram Stoker.” In Supernatural Fiction Writers. [GGII: 0716].

DEMETRAKOPOULOS, Stephanie. “Feminism, Sex Role Exchanges, and Other Subliminal Fantasies in Bram Stoker’s Dracula.” [GGI: 1222].

DIJKSTRA, Bran. “The Metamorphoses of the Vam-pire: Dracula and his Daughters.” In Idols of Perversity: Fantasies of Feminine Evil in Fin de Siècle Culture. [GGII: 0717].

DYER, Richard. “Children of the Night: Vampirism as Homosexuality, Homosexuality as Vampirism.” [GGII: 0717].

EDWARDS, Robert Alan. “The Uses of the Past in the Gothic Novels of Bram Stoker,” Master’s Thesis, Oxford University, 1994.

FAIG, Kenneth W. Jr. “About Bram.” [GGII: 0720].

FARSON, Daniel. The Man Who Wrote Dracula: A Biography of Bram Stoker. [GGI: 1224].

FINNÉ, Jacques. Bibliographie de Dracula. [GGII: 0721]

FLORESCU, Radu and Raymond T. MC NALLY. In Search of Dracula: A True History of Dracula and the Vampire Legends. [GGI: 1FLORESCU, Radu. Dracula, Prince of Many Faces. [GGII: 0722].

FONTANA, Ernest. “Lombroso’s Criminal Man and Stoker’s Dracula.” [GGII: 0723].

FRY, Carrol. “Fictional Conventions and Sexuality in Dracula.” [GGI: 1226].

GAGNIER, Regenia. “Evolution and Information: or, Eroticism and Everyday Life in Dracula and Late Victorian Æstheticism.” In Sex and Death in Victorian Literature. [GGII: 0724].

GARNETT, Rhys. “Dracula and The Beetle : Imperial and Sexual Guilt and Fear in Late Victorian Fantasy” (30-54). In Science Fiction Roots and Branches: Contemporary Critical Approaches, eds. Rhys Garnett and R. J. Ellis. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire, UK: MacMillan, 1990.

GATTEGNO, Jean. “Folie, croyance, et fantastique dans Dracula.” [GGI: 1227].

GERKE, Robert S. “The Structure of Horror in Dracula.” The Bulletin of the West Virginia Association of College English Teachers, Huntington, WV  15 (1993): 9-20.

GIBSON, Matthew. “Bram Stoker and the Treaty of Berlin (1878).“ Gothic Studies 6 (2004): 236-51.

GLOVER, David. “’Why White?’: On Worms and Skin in Bram Stoker’s Later Fiction.” Gothic Studies 2 (2000): 346-60.

GOLDSWORTHY, Vesna. “The Balkan Threat: Vampires, Spies, Murder and the Orient Express: Dracula and the Balkan Gothic” (73-111). In Inventing Ruritania: The Imperialism of the Imagination. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1998.

GREENWAY, John. “Seward’s Folly: Dracula as a Critique of Normal Science.” [GGII: 0725].

GRIFFIN, Gail B. “’Your Girls That You All Love Are Mine’: Dracula and Victorian Male Sexual Imagination.” [GGI: 1228].

GÜRÇAGLAR, S.T. “Adding Towards a Nationalist Text: On a Turkish Translation of Dracula.” Target 13:1 (2002): 125-48.

HAINING, Peter. The Dracula Centenary Book. [GGII: 0726].

HALBERSTAM, Judith. “Technologies of Monstrosity: Bram Stoker’s Dracula.” [GGII: 0727].

HARBIN, Leigh Joyce. “A Dangerous Woman and a Man’s Brain: Mina Harker, Clarice Starling and the Empowerment of the Gothic Heroine in Novel and Film.” West Virginia University Philological Papers 49 (2002-2003): 30-37.

HARSE, Katie. “Dracula’s Reflection: The Jewel of Seven Stars ” (51-67). In The Fantastic Vampire: Studies in the Children of the Night; Selected Essays from the Eighteenth International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts, ed.  James Craig Holte. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2002.

HATLEN, Burton. “The Return of the Repressed/ Oppressed in Bram Stoker’s Dracula.” [GGI: 1229].

HENNELLY, Mark M. Jr. “Dracula: The Gnostic Quest and Victorian Wasteland.” [GGI: 1230].

HENNELLY, Mark M. Jr.. “The Victorian Book of the Dead: Dracula.” [GGII: 0728].

HERSCHBACH, Robert Adrian. “Gothic Economies: Global Capitalism and the Boundaries of Identity.” Dissertation Abstracts International 63:12 (2003): 4322 (University of New Hampshire).

HINCKLEY, David Jesse. “With Uncanny Aim: Horror Fiction, the Repression of Culture, the Cult of the Re-pressed.” Dissertation Abstracts International 59:12 (19-98): 4424A (University of California, Riverside).

HINDLE, Maurice. “Introduction.” To Dracula. [GGII: 0729].

HOLDEN, Philip. “Castle, Coffin, Stomach: Dracula and the Banality of the Occult.” Victorian Literature and Culture 29 (2001): 469-85. On Stoker’s use of the occult sciences in the writing of Dracula.

HOMAN, Richard L. “Freud’s ’ Seduction Theory ’ on Stage: Deane’s and Balderston’s Dracula.” [GGII: 07-30].

HOOD, Gwenyth. “Sauron and Dracula.” [GGII: 0731].

HOWES, Majorie. “The Mediation of the Feminine: Bisexuality, Homoerotic Desire, and Self-Expression in Bram Stoker’s Dracula.” [GGII: 0732].

HUGHES, William. “’so Unlike the Normal Lunatic’: Abnormal Psychology in Bram Stoker’s Dracula.” University of Mississippi Studies in English 11-12 (1993-1995): 1-10.

HUGHES, William. “Profane Resurrections: Bram Stoker’s Self-Censorship in The Jewel of Seven Stars ” (132-39). In Gothick: Origins and Innovations, eds. Allan Lloyd Smith and Victor  Sage. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1994.

HUGHES, William. “’Militant Instinct’: The Perverse Eugenics of Bram Stoker’s Fiction.” The Bram Stoker Society Journal 6 (1994): 11-19.

HUGHES, William. Bram Stoker: A Bibliography. Brisbane, Australia: Department of English, University of Queensland, 1997.

HUGHES, William . “Stoker, Bram [Abraham] (1842-1912]” (223-26). In The Handbook of Gothic Literature, ed.  Marie Mulvey-Roberts. New York: New York University Press, 1998.

HUGHES, William . “Fictional Vampires in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries” (143-49). In A Companion to the Gothic, ed. David Punter. Oxford, UK and Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishers, 2000.

HUGHES, William. “’The Raw Yolky Taste of Life’: Spirituality, Secularity, and the Vampire.” Gothic Studies 2 (2000): 148-56.

HUGHES, William. Beyond Dracula: Bram Stoker’s Fiction and its Cultural Context. New York: Palgrave, 2000.

HUGHES, William. “A Singular Invasion: Revisiting the Postcoloniality of Bram Stoker’s Dracula ” (88-102). In Empire and the Gothic: The Politics of Genre, eds. Andrew Smith and William Hughes. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire, U.K.: Palgrave/Macmillan, 2003.

HUGHES, William and Andrew SMITH. Bram Stoker: History, Psychoanalysis, and the Gothic. New York: St. Martin’s Press; London/Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1998.

HUGHES, William. “’To build together a new nation:’ Colonising Europe in Bram Stoker’s The Lady of the Shroud.“ Gothic Studies 5:2 (2003): 32-46.

HYLES, Vernon. “Stoker, Frankenstein, Dracula, Sex, Violence, and Incompetence.” [GGII: 0733].

INGELBIEN, Raphael. “Gothic Genealogies: Dracula, Bowen’s Court. and Anglo-Irish Psychology.“ ELH 70 (2003): 1089-05.

IRWIN, Eric. “Dracula’s Friends and Forerunners.” [GGI: 1231].

JOHNSON, Alan P. “’Dual Life’: The Status of Women in Stoker’s Dracula.” [GGII: 0734].

JOHNSON, Alan P. “Bent and Broken Necks: Signs of Design in Stoker’s Dracula.” [GGII: 0735].

KEATS, Patrick. “Stoker’s Dracula.” [GGII: 0736].

KIRTLEY, Bacil F. “Dracula, the Monastic Chronicles, and Slavic Folklore.” [GGI: 1233].

LEATHERDALE, Clive. Dracula, the Novel and the Legend: A Study of Bram Stoker’s Gothic Masterpiece. [GGII: 0737].

LEATHERDALE, Clive. The Origins of Dracula. [GGII: 0738].

LECERCLE, Jean-Jacques. “The Kitten’s Nose: Dracula and Witchcraft” (71-85). In The Gothic, ed.  Fred Botting. Cambridge: Boydell and Brewer, 2001.

LENNON, Sean. Irish Gothic Writers: Bram Stoker and the Irish Supernatural Tradition. Dublin: Dublin Corporation Public Libraries, 1998.

LEWIS, Pericles. “Dracula and the Epistemology of the Victorian Gothic Novel” (71-81). In Dracula: The Shade and the Shadow, ed. Elizabeth Miller. Westcliffe-on-sea, Essex, UK: Desert Island Books, 1998.

LIDSTON, Robert. “Dracula and ’Salem’s Lot: Why the Monsters Won’t Die.” [GGII: 0739].

LOTTES, Wolfgang. “Dracula and Co.: Der Vampir in der englischen literatur.” [GGII: 0740].

LUDLAM, Harry. A Biography of Dracula: The Life Story of Bram Stoker. [GGI: 1234].

MACFIE, Sian. “‘The Suck Us Dry’: A Study of Late Nineteenth Century Projections of Vampiric Women.” In Subjectivity and Literature from the Romantics to the Present Day. [GGII: 0741].

MAC GILLIVRAY, Royce. “Dracula: Bram Stoker’s Spoiled Masterpiece.” [GGI: 1235].

MARSHALL, Bridget M. “The Face of Evil: Phrenology, Physiognomy, and the Gothic Villain.”  Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies 6 (2000): 161-72.

MASON, Diane. “’A very devil with men’: The Pathology and Iconography of the Erotic Consumptive and the Attractive Masturbator.” Gothic Studies 2 (2000): 205-17.

MC DONALD, Beth E. “The Vampire as Trickster Figure in Bram Stoker’s Dracula.” [GGII: 0742].

MC GILLIVRAY, Anne. “’What sort of grim adventure was it on which I had embarked?’ Lawyers, Vampires and the Melancholy of Law.” Gothic Studies 4 (2002): 116-32.

MC GUIRE, Karen. “Of Artists, Vampires, and Creativity.” [GGII: 0743].

MC NALLY, Raymond. Dracula: A Biography of Vlad the Impaler, 1431-1476. [GGI: 1236].

MC NALLY, Raymond. The Essential Dracula. [GGI: 1237].

MC NALLY, Raymond . “Bram Stoker and Irish Gothic” (37-50). In The Fantastic Vampire: Studies in the Children of the Night, ed.  James Craig Holte. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2002.

MC WHIR, Ann. “Pollution and Redemption in Dracula.” [GGII: 0745].

MILBANK, Alison. “’Powers Old and New’: Stoker’s Alliances with Anglo-Irish Gothic” (12-28). In Bram Stoker: History Psychoanalysis and the Gothic, eds. William Hughes and Andrew Smith. Houndmills, UK: Macmillan, 1998.

MILLER, Elizabeth, ed. Dracula: The Shade and the Shadow. Westcliffe-on-sea, Essex, UK: Desert Island Books, 1998. 

MILLER, Elizabeth. “Frankenstein and Dracula : The Question of Influence” (123-30). In Visions of the Fantastic: Selected Essays from the Fifteenth International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1996.

MILLER, Elizabeth. “Shapeshifting Dracula : The Abridged Edition of 1901” (23-35). In The Fantastic Vampire: Studies in the Children of the Night, ed. James Craig Holte. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2002.

MILLER, Elizabeth. Dracula: Sense & Nonsense. Westcliff-on-Sea. UK: Desert Island Books. 2000.

MILLER, Elizabeth.  “Special Feature: List of Bram Stoker’s  Sources for Dracula.” Journal of Dracula Studies 7 (2005): 45.

MORETTI, Franco. “The Dialectic of Fear: Dracula and Frankenstein.” [GGII: 0746].

MORRISON, Daniel D. “My Day with Dracula.” [GGII: 0747].

MURPHY, Brian. “The Nightmare of the Dark: The Gothic Legacy of Count Dracula.” [GGI: 1238].

MURRAY, Paul. From the Shadow of Dracula: A Life of Bram Stoker. London: Jonathan Cape. 2004.

NANDRIS, Grigore. “The Historical Dracula: The Theme of his Legend in the Western and in the Eastern Literatures of Europe.” [GGI: 1239].

NYBERG, Suzanna. “Men in Love: The Fantasizing of Bram Stoker and Edvard Munch” (112-132). In The Fantastic Vampire: Studies in the Children of the Night, ed.  James Craig Holte. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2002.

OINAS, Felix J. “East European Vampires and Dracula.” [GGI: 1240].

OLIVARES MERINO, Julio Angel. Cenizas del plenilunio alado: Pálpitos y vestigios del vampiro en la literatura inglesa anterior a Drácula de Bram Stoker: Trádicion literaria y folclórica. Jaén: Universidad de Jaén, 2001.

OSBOROUGH, W.N. “The Dublin Castle Career (1866-78) of Bram Stoker.” Gothic Studies 1 (1999): 222-40.

PARIS, Mark M. “From Clinic to Classroom While Uncovering the Evil Dead in Dracula: A Psychoanalytic Pedagogy.” In Practicing Theory in Introductory College Literature Courses. [GGII: 0748].

PEDLAR, Valerie. “Dracula : A Fin de Siècle Fanta-sy” (196-216). In The Nineteenth-Century Novel: Identities, ed.  Dennis Walder. London: Routledge, 2001.

PENCAK, William. “’Appalling in its Gloomy Fascination’: Stoker’s Dracula and Wilde’s Salomé ” (73-89). In The Fantastic Vampire: Studies in the Children of the Night; Selected Essays from the Eighteenth International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts, ed.  James Craig Holte. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2002.

PERRY, Dennis R. “Whitman’s Influence on Sto-ker’s Dracula.” [GGII: 0749].

PHILIPS, Robert and Branimir RIEGER. “The Ag-ony and the Ecstasy: A Jungian Analysis of Two Vampire Novels, Meredith Ann Pierce’s The Dark Angel and Bram Stoker’s Dracula.” [GGII: 0750].

PICK, Daniel. “’Terrors of the Night’: Dracula and ’Degeneration’ in the Late Nineteenth Century.” [GGII: 07-51].

PLOEG, Scott Vander. “Stoker’s Dracula : A Neo-Gothic Experiment” (90-111). In The Fantastic Vampire: Studies in the Children of the Night; Selected Essays from the Eighteenth International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts, ed.  James Craig Holte. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2002.

POPE, Rebecca. “Writing and Biting in Dracula.” [GGII: 0752].

RONAY, Gabriel. The Dracula Myth. [GGI: 1243].

ROTH, Phyllis A. “Suddenly Sexual Women in Bram Stoker’s Dracula.” [GGI: 1245].

ROTH, Phyllis A. Bram Stoker. [GGII: 0753].

SCANDURA, Jani. “Deadly Professions: Dracula, Undertakers, and the Embalmed Corpse.“ Victorian Studies 40 (1996): 1-31.

SCHAFFER, Talia. ’A Wilde Desire Took Me;’ The Homoerotic History of Dracula.“ ELH 61 (1994): 381-435.

SEED, David. “The Narrative Method of Dracula.” [GGII: 0754].

SENF, Carol N. “Dracula: The Unseen Face in the Mirror.” [GGI: 1246].

SENF, Carol N. “Dracula: Stoker’s Response to the New Wo-man.” [GGII: 0755].

SENF, Carol N. “Brides of Dracula: From Novel to Film.” [GGII: 0756].

SENF, Carol N. “The Lady of the Shroud: Stoker’s Successor to Dracula.” [GGII: 0757].

SENF, Carol N. Dracula: Between Tradition and Modernism. New York: Twayne, 1998.

SENF, Carol N. “Dracula and The Lair of the White Worm: Bram Stoker’s Commentary on Victorian Science.” Gothic Studies 2 (2000): 218-31.

SENF, Carol N. Science and Social Science in Bram Stoker’s Fiction. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2002. 

SHEPARD, Leslie and Albert POWER. Dracula: Celebrating 100 Years. Dublin: Mentor, 1997.

SKAL, David J. Hollywood Gothic: The Tangled Web of Dracula from Novel to Stage to Screen. [GGII: 0758].

SMITH, Andrew. Dracula and the Critics. Sheffield, UK: Sheffield Hallam University Press, 1996.

SMITH, Andrew. “Bringing Bram Stoker Back from the Margins.” Irish Studies Review 9 (2001): 241-46.

SMITH, Andrew. “Demonising the Americans: Bram Stoker’s Postcolonial Gothic.“ Gothic Studies 5:2 (2003): 2031.

SMITH, Andrew. “Love. Freud. and the Female Gothic: Bram Stoker’s The Jewel of Seven Stars.“ Gothic Studies 6 (2004): 80-89.

SMITH, Malcolm. “Dracula and the Victorian Frame of Mind.” [GGII: 0759].

SPARKS, Tabitha. “Medical Gothic and the Return to the Contagious Diseases Acts in Stoker and Machen.“ Nineteenth Century Feminisms 6 (2002): 87-102.

SPEAR, Jeffrey L. “Gender and Sexual Disease in Dracula” (179-92). In Virginal Sexuality and Textuality in Victorian Literature. Boulder, CO: netLibrary, Incorporated, 1999.

SPEHNER, Norbert. Dracula, Opus 300: Guide chrono-bibliographique des éditions, des versions et des adaptations internationales du roman de Bram Stoker, Un siècle d’édition (1897-1997). Quebec: Ashem Fictions, 19-96. [Dracula, opus 300: Chrono-bibliographic guide to editions, versions, and international adaptations of Bram Stoker’s novel. a century of edition (1897-1997)].

STABLEFORD, Brian. “STOKER, Bram” (573-75). In St. James Guide to Horror, Ghost, and Gothic Writers, ed.  David Pringle. Detroit: St. James Press/Gale, 1998.

STADE, George. “Dracula’s Women.” [GGII: 0760].

STEIN, Gerard. “Dracula, ou la circulation du ‘sang.’” [GGI: 1247].

STEVENSON, John Allen. “A Vampire in the Mirror: The Sexuality of Dracula.” [GGII: 0761].

STEWART, Garrett. “‘Count Me In’: Dracula, Hypnotic Participation, and the Late Victorian Gothic of Reading.” Literature Interpretation Theory 5 (1994): 1-18.

STEWART-GORDON, James. “Durable Dracula–– Beloved Fiend of the Horror Circuit.” [GGI: 1248].

STOTT, Rebecca. “The Kiss of Death: A Demystification of the Late Nineteenth Century ’Femme Fatale’ in Selected Works of Bram Stoker, Rider Haggard, Joseph Conrad, and Thomas Hardy.” [GGII: 0762].

TEMPLE, Philip. “The Origins of ’Dracula.’” [GGII: 0763].

VALENTE, Joseph. “’Double Born’: Bram Stoker and the Metrocolonial Gothic.” Modern Fiction Studies 46 (2000): 632-45.

VARMA, Devendra P. “The Genesis of Dracula: A Revisit.” In The Vampire’s Bedside Companion: The Amazing World of Vampires in Fact and Fiction. [GGII: 0765].

VARMA, Devendra P. “Dracula’s Voyage: From Pontus to Hellespontus.” In Dracula: The Vampire and the Critics. [GGII: 0766].

VOLLER, Jack G. “Bram Stoker” (420-28). In Gothic Writers: A Critical and Bibliographical Guide, eds. Douglass H. Thomson, Jack G. Voller and Frederick S. Frank. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2002.

WALL, Geoffrey. “‘Different from Writing’: Dracula in 1897.” [GGII: 0767].

WALSH, Thomas P. “Dracula: Logos and Myth.” [GGI: 1251].

WARREN, Louis S. “Buffalo Bill Meets Dracula: William F. Cody, Bram Stoker, and the Frontiers of Racial Decay.” American Historical Review 107:4 (2002): 1124-57.

WASSON, Richard P. “The Politics of Dracula.” [GGI: 1252].

WEISSMAN, Judith. “Women and Vampires: Dracula as a Victorian Novel.” [GGI: 1253].

WEISSMAN, Judith. “Bram Stoker: Semidemons and Secretaries.” In Half Savage and Hearty and Free: Women and Rural Radicalism in the Nineteenth Century Novel. [GGII: 0768].

WICKE, Jennifer. “Vampiric Typewriting: Dracula and its Media.” [GGII: 0769].

WILSON, A.N. “Introduction.” To Dracula. [GGII: 0770].

WOLF, Leonard. A Dream of Dracula: In Search of the Living Dead. [GGI: 1254].

WOLF, Leonard. The Essential Dracula: The Definitive Annotated Edition of Bram Stoker’s Classic Novel. [GGII: 0771].

WRIGHT, Julia M. “Colonial Gothic and the Circulation of Wealth: ‘Some Neglected Children:’ Thwarted Genealogies in Colonial History: Bram Stoker and Oscar Wilde” (XXX). In Ireland, India and Nationalism in Nineteenth-Century Literature. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2007. [GGIV: 0000]

WYNNE, Catherine Elizabeth. “Bram Stoker, Arthur Conan Doyle and the Colonial Gothic,” Doctoral Thesis, Oxford University, 1999.

ZANGER, Jules. “A Sympathetic Vibration: Dracula and the Jews.” English Literature in Transition 34 (1991): 32-43.