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Gothic Setting In Dracula

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Gothic Setting Dracula by Bram Stoker, is the exact definition of a well written Gothic novel. The elements that Stoker uses in his novel are everything that gothic writers want. The gothic nature of Dracula is portrayed in the setting using landscape, weather and buildings. First of all, the landscape sets off a creepy atmosphere throughout the book. Stoker puts Dracula’s castle in Transylvania to present that gothic feel early. Transylvania still had its old ways of being superstitious and believing in ghost. This makes Dracula’s character seem more real in this type of setting. The people that lived there knew of Dracula and created an eerie setting as Harker goes to Dracula’s castle. Another example of this is the forest that is in …show more content…

Dracula’s castle is one of the best examples of this. It is an old, ruined castle that has been there for many years. The castle itself just holds a very ancient and spooky setting. There is also a feeling of a lot of bad things have happened in the castle. Another example of this is the Carfax. The Carfax is one of the two houses that Dracula owns and keeps his boxes of dirt in. Vanhelsing’s party goes to the house and plans on going in and placing sacred objects in the boxes. In Dracula, Stoker writes, “I think the feeling was common to us all, for I noticed that the others kept looking over their shoulders at every sound and every new shadow, just as I felt myself doing” (240). The feeling made in the seemingly abandoned house made the atmosphere more spooky. All the characters felt this way inside the house because of its gothic feel. The floor is inches deep with dust and cobwebs hung from the ceilings. It is a very eerie setting. In conclusion, Bram Stoker’s Dracula is a suspenseful and spooky novel because of its gothic nature. The landscape, weather and buildings are all factors used by Stoker to show the gothic elements of this novel. Dracula is one of the best gothic novels in

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