Introduction: The Mystery and Mystique of the Vampire 1. Portrait Gallery of the Undead 2. Generation V 3. All-American Vampires (and Zombies) 4. That Sucking Sound 5. The Key to Immortality Conclusion: Vampires, Inside and Out References Acknowledgements Photo Acknowledgements Index
Erik Butler has written extensively on European culture and film and taught at Emory University. His books include Metamorphoses of the Vampire in Literature and Film (2011).
'just to say the word "vampire" now is to make some readers shudder, and not for the right reasons. But reading a new study - Erik Butler's The Rise of the Vampire - we realise that what is interesting isn't just the vampires themselves but why they appear in the first place ... Butler believes, amusingly, that if Twilight's dark heart was properly understood, it would be banned from homes and schools everywhere. And he's right. In many unintended ways, the bloodless vampires on offer to teenagers right now are the scariest of all; maybe not in themselves but in what they say about a world that sucks them up.' - The Times 'The author is to be congratulated on writing a shrewd and sometimes sardonic study on the origins of an ancient mystery, which in the past decade has been reduced to 50 shades of comic strip ... For those with a taste for the supernatural, this is an excellent guidebook. Dracula probably would have enjoyed it.' - The Washington Times 'Mr. Butler is to be applauded for elucidating the emergence of vampire mythology in history and its progression through various cultures up to its widespread presence in today's culture. Weaving in themes of vampirism as cultural and psychological symptoms, amplifications of themes of life and its manifold limits and complexities, Erik Butler has created a masterful compendium of ideas.' - New York Journal of Books
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