Vampires in America

Vampires in America
Author: Sam Navarre
Publisher: The Rosen Publishing Group, Inc
Total Pages: 50
Release: 2011-12-15
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 1448855284

Presents a history of vampire lore in America and focuses on its popular culture impact in print and film.

Vampires Among Us

Vampires Among Us
Author: Rosemary Ellen Guiley
Publisher: Visionary Living, Inc.
Total Pages: 276
Release: 2016-09-15
Genre: Body, Mind & Spirit
ISBN: 1942157908

Vampires Are Us

Vampires Are Us
Author: Adler, Margot
Publisher: Weiser Books
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2014-03-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1578635608

“Vampires. Why do we care? In these pages you will find what is very simply, the most literate, imaginative, and just plain fascinating answer to that question ever written.” ?Whitley Strieber In a culture that does not do death particularly well, we are obsessed with mortality. Margot Adler writes, “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—by now she has read 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. Vampires Are Us explores the issues of power, politics, morality, identity, and even the fate of the planet that show up in vampire novels today. Perhaps, Adler suggests, our blood is oil, perhaps our prey is the planet. Perhaps vampires are us.

Piercing the Darkness

Piercing the Darkness
Author: Katherine Ramsland
Publisher: HarperTorch
Total Pages: 560
Release: 1999-10-06
Genre: True Crime
ISBN: 9780061059452

The true story of Susan Walsh, a young reporter who mysteriously disappeared while writing about downtown Manhattan's "vampire" underground furnishes an exploration into a real-life vampire world that has its own rituals, rules, boundaries, and penalties. Reprint. AB. BAKER & TAYLOR Bks

American Vampires

American Vampires
Author: Norine Dresser
Publisher: Vintage
Total Pages: 260
Release: 1990
Genre: Body, Mind & Spirit
ISBN: 9780679730415

The Lure of the Vampire

The Lure of the Vampire
Author: Milly Williamson
Publisher: Wallflower Press
Total Pages: 228
Release: 2005
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781904764403

This title explores the enduring myth of Dracula and vampires and just why it has remained so popular for so long.

Vampires Do Exist

Vampires Do Exist
Author: Dado Dali
Publisher: Booktango
Total Pages: 54
Release: 2012-10-15
Genre: Body, Mind & Spirit
ISBN: 1468917129

Everything you can find in this text are pure facts from real life but also a word of science. In further pages of our work we will display not only science facts vampires and vampirism but also about real cases from real life that are confirmed by the public and people talk about it.

Vampires

Vampires
Author: Peter Day
Publisher: Rodopi
Total Pages: 258
Release: 2006
Genre: History
ISBN: 9042016698

Preliminary Material --Introduction /Peter Day --Legend of the Vampire --Getting to know the Un-dead: Bram Stoker, Vampires and Dracula /Elizabeth Miller --"One for Ever": Desire, Subjectivity and the Threat of the Abject in Sheridan Le Fanu's Carmilla /Hyun-Jung Lee --Sex, Death, and Ecstacy: The Art of Transgression /Lois Drawmer --The Name of the Vampire: Some Reflections on Current Linguistic Theories on the Etymology of the Word Vampire /Peter Mario Kreuter --The Discourse of the Vampire in First World War Writing /Terry Phillips --"Dead Man Walking": The Historical Context of Vampire Beliefs /Darren Oldridge --Vampire Dogs and Marsupial Hyenas: Fear, Myth, and the Tasmanian Tiger's Extinction /Phil Bagust --Vampires for the Modern Mind --Vampire Subcultures /Meg Barker --Embracing the Metropolis: Urban Vampires in American Cinema of the 1980s and 90s /Stacey Abbott --Piercing the Corporate Veil - With a Stake? Vampire Imagery and the Law /Sharon Sutherland --The Vampire and the Cyborg Embrace: Affect Beyond Fantasy in Virtual Materialism /James Tobias --Looking in the Mirror: Vampires, the Symbolic, and the Thing /Fiona Peters --"Death to Vampires!": The Vampire Body and the Meaning of Mutilation /Elizabeth McCarthy --The Un-dead: To be Feared or/and Pitied /Nursel Icoz --"You're Whining Again Louis": Anne Rice's Vampires as Indices of the Depressive Self /Pete Remington.

Celluloid Vampires

Celluloid Vampires
Author: Stacey Abbott
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Total Pages: 279
Release: 2009-03-06
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 029278449X

In 1896, French magician and filmmaker George Méliès brought forth the first celluloid vampire in his film Le manoir du diable. The vampire continues to be one of film's most popular gothic monsters and in fact, today more people become acquainted with the vampire through film than through literature, such as Bram Stoker's classic Dracula. How has this long legacy of celluloid vampires affected our understanding of vampire mythology? And how has the vampire morphed from its folkloric and literary origins? In this entertaining and absorbing work, Stacey Abbott challenges the conventional interpretation of vampire mythology and argues that the medium of film has completely reinvented the vampire archetype. Rather than representing the primitive and folkloric, the vampire has come to embody the very experience of modernity. No longer in a cape and coffin, today's vampire resides in major cities, listens to punk music, embraces technology, and adapts to any situation. Sometimes she's even female. With case studies of vampire classics such as Nosferatu, Martin, Blade, and Habit, the author traces the evolution of the American vampire film, arguing that vampires are more than just blood-drinking monsters; they reflect the cultural and social climate of the societies that produce them, especially during times of intense change and modernization. Abbott also explores how independent filmmaking techniques, special effects makeup, and the stunning and ultramodern computer-generated effects of recent films have affected the representation of the vampire in film.

Vampire Legends in Contemporary American Culture

Vampire Legends in Contemporary American Culture
Author: William Patrick Day
Publisher: University Press of Kentucky
Total Pages: 172
Release: 2021-02-15
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0813153948

While vampire stories have been part of popular culture since the beginning of the nineteenth century, it has been in recent decades that they have become a central part of American culture. Vampire Legends in Contemporary American Culture looks at how vampire stories—from Bram Stoker's Dracula to Blacula, from Bela Lugosi's films to Love at First Bite—have become part of our ongoing debate about what it means to be human. William Patrick Day looks at how writers and filmmakers as diverse as Anne Rice and Andy Warhol present the vampire as an archetype of human identity, as well as how many post-modern vampire stories reflect our fear and attraction to stories of addiction and violence. He argues that contemporary stories use the character of Dracula to explore modern values, and that stories of vampire slayers, such as the popular television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, integrate current feminist ideas and the image of the Vietnam veteran into a new heroic version of the vampire story.