The Vampyre
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7,20 |
Naar shop
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7,20 |
Naar shop
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9,20 |
Naar shop
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Beschrijving
Bol
The Vampyre is a foundational work of Gothic fiction, transforming folkloric superstition into the figure of the aristocratic, seductive predator. Through the chilling tale of Lord Ruthven and the doomed Aubrey, Polidori crafts a narrative of fascination, corruption, and social menace, written in a restrained yet ominous prose style. Emerging from the Romantic-era preoccupation with terror, transgression, and the uncanny, the novella helped establish the literary vampire as a symbol of decadent power and parasitic desire. John William Polidori, physician, writer, and sometime companion to Lord Byron, composed The Vampyre in the aftermath of the famous 1816 gathering at the Villa Diodati, where Mary Shelley also conceived Frankenstein. Polidori's proximity to Byron, and his fraught awareness of charisma, privilege, and domination, clearly shaped Lord Ruthven, whose cold magnetism reflects both personal observation and cultural critique. Readers interested in Gothic literature, Romanticism, or the origins of modern horror will find The Vampyre indispensable. Brief yet influential, it rewards attention as both a gripping tale and a landmark in the evolution of supernatural fiction.
The Vampyre is a foundational work of Gothic fiction, transforming folkloric superstition into the figure of the aristocratic, seductive predator. Through the chilling tale of Lord Ruthven and the doomed Aubrey, Polidori crafts a narrative of fascination, corruption, and social menace, written in a restrained yet ominous prose style. Emerging from the Romantic-era preoccupation with terror, transgression, and the uncanny, the novella helped establish the literary vampire as a symbol of decadent power and parasitic desire. John William Polidori, physician, writer, and sometime companion to Lord Byron, composed The Vampyre in the aftermath of the famous 1816 gathering at the Villa Diodati, where Mary Shelley also conceived Frankenstein. Polidori's proximity to Byron, and his fraught awareness of charisma, privilege, and domination, clearly shaped Lord Ruthven, whose cold magnetism reflects both personal observation and cultural critique. Readers interested in Gothic literature, Romanticism, or the origins of modern horror will find The Vampyre indispensable. Brief yet influential, it rewards attention as both a gripping tale and a landmark in the evolution of supernatural fiction.
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