2017
			
	    
	
	
    Representation and Portrayal of Vampires in Film and Television Adaptations
ADAMOVÁ, DianaBasic information
Original name
Representation and Portrayal of Vampires in Film and Television Adaptations
	Authors
Edition
 The Grotesque, Freakish and Bizarre in Anglophone  Literatures and Cultures, 2017
			Other information
Language
English
		Type of outcome
Conference abstract
		Field of Study
60204 General literature studies
		Country of publisher
Czech Republic
		Confidentiality degree
is not subject to a state or trade secret
		Organization unit
Faculty of Philosophy and Science in Opava
			ISBN
978-80-8105-877-6
		Keywords in English
Representation; portrayal; vampires; film; television; adaptations
		Tags
International impact
		
				
				Changed: 16/3/2018 12:42, PhDr. Diana Adamová, Ph.D.
				
		Abstract
In the original language
Vampires were perceived as horrifying unnatural monsters and served to define the boundaries of the normal. As an abomination, every vampire had to be annihilated to reinstate the natural order. This perception changed in the twentieth century, when vampir es turned into the readers ́ subjects of identification and sympathy. The trend began in Anne Rice ́s Interview with the Vampire and was developed in the twenty- first century novels. Their adaptations allowed further characterization of the new type of a vam pire, who feels sympathy with humans and even falls in love with them. This development in the vampire ́s portrayal, from a hideous monster to a suffering hero, creates an important part of this paper, which deals with representation and portrayal of vampir es in various film and television adaptations of novels. The analysis focuses especially on the adaptations of Bram Stoker ́s Dracula, Anne Rice ́s The Vampire Chronicles and Charlaine Harris ́s The Southern Vampire Mysteries, concentrating on the way the vam pire characters are depicted in the chosen adaptations. Further, the paper presents whether and how the main vampire characters conceal their monstrosity, the way their true nature tends to be revealed, and whether they embody a hero or a villain in the st ory, as well as their perception by other characters.