From feared creatures of the night to romantically misunderstood, vampires have been a widely popular character in modern fiction. The characteristics have changed to a less frightening monster who is tormented with living for eternity versus the blood thirsty creature who haunts the dark and empty streets for unsuspecting victims.
Vampire myths were part of European civilization since the Dark Ages. Science was a new concept and everyone turned to religion or the supernatural to try and make sense of the world around them. It is in Europe, specifically British literature, where the first literary vampire was introduced.
In Robert Southey’s 1801 epic poem Thalaba the Destroyer, explores a wide range of supernatural …show more content…
In an article by Devon Maloney for Wired, Dracula is heavily cannoned as “the story that invented the genre.” The archetype for the vampire is most closely resembled to Stoker’s Count Dracula. It is in Dracula that we find the greatest similarities to that of the modern vampire: no reflection in mirrors, transformation to a bat, and the creatures must have an invitation to enter a home. Dracula is horror at its finest; the traits the Count holds are enough to scare me into the wee hours of the morning. I have no idea how Mina Harker, the woman that Dracula is drawn to, survives knowing such a horrifying monster. I would definitely be screaming my head off and finding the nearest available exit from his …show more content…
Twilight was a world-wide phenomenon that changed the literacy vampire. No longer terrifying, but heavily romanticized, the vampires in this world have established societies that govern their place with humans. They have a strict NO KILLING HUMANS and a NO TURN policy. The way that these vampires quench their thirst for blood is by acquiring blood bags from a blood bank or hunting wild animals like deer. They also have established rules to keep humans safe from being turned into a creature of the night. Lastly, these vampires do not fear sunlight, but they do sparkle when rays of light hit their