Event overview
A talk by Eleanor Fitzsimons
Bram Stoker, born in Dublin seven years before Oscar, knew the Wilde family well. He was friendly with Willie at Trinity College, Dublin, and nominated Oscar for membership of the Philosophical Society, although they were not close friends, particularly after Bram married Oscar’s girlfriend. A regular visitor to the Wilde family home, Bram, who was Auditor of the Historical Society, loved listening to Sir William Wilde, a keen Egyptologist. His discovery of the mummified remains of a dwarf informed Bram’s The Jewel of the Seven Stars (1903). Bram and Lady Wilde shared a fascination with Irish folklore: “In the Transylvanian legends and superstitions,” she observed, “many will be found identical with the Irish”. One was that “the dead are only in a trance; they can hear everything but can make no sign”. In Ancient Legends, Mystic Charms & Superstitions of Ireland, published ten years before Dracula, she wrote of horned witches drawing blood from victims as they slept; of men assuming the shape of wolves; and of monstrous, soul-devouring hounds. In Dracula, Bram’s “weird sisters” feed on the blood of men and Dracula assumes the shape of “an immense dog”. How deep does the influence of the Wilde family run in Dracula?
Eleanor Fitzsimons is a researcher and writer who specialises in historical and current feminist issues. Her work has been published in a range of newspapers and journals including The Sunday Times, The Guardian, History Today, and The Irish Times, and she is a regular radio and television contributor. Her first book, Wilde’s Women: how Oscar Wilde was shaped by the women he knew, was published by Duckworth/The Overlook Press in 2015. Her second, The Life and Loves of E. Nesbit, was published by Duckworth/Abrams Books in October 2019. She is an honorary patron of the Oscar Wilde Society, and a member of the editorial board of society journal, The Wildean.
British Association of Decadence Studies web page
Dates & times
Date | Time | Add to calendar |
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3 Dec 2020 | 7:30pm - 8:30pm |
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