ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos

ELA 12: 1.13 Hey Mr. Postman! 10 Views


Share It!


Description:

Who knew vampire fiction could involve so much paperwork? Isn't it normally just sparkles and awkward babies?

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:03

When you think about Dracula you probably think of his pointy fangs [Man dressed as Dracula stood outside a mansion]

00:07

or his cape rather than say a big pile of documents but looking at how the novel's

00:13

organized well maybe you should unlike a lot of stories which are either told by [Guys hanging out on a beach by a campfire]

00:17

a narrator who is completely outside of the story or by a character whose part

00:22

of the story Dracula doesn't follow either of these structures it's told not [An accountant turned author writing a Dracula novel]

00:26

only through letters but all sorts of document telegrams diaries reports

00:31

memoranda phonograph transcriptions old tic-tac-toe games well you know you name [A selection of old documents together]

00:35

it and thank goodness it's published as a book instead of all those documents [Man drops lots of documents while riding on the bus]

00:40

just stapled together and it'd be a nightmare to read on the bus anyway this

00:44

isn't exactly new Dracula is one of many epistle's that is literary works written

00:50

as a letter or as a series of letters you can find these works as far back as

00:55

Ovidii Heroides a collection of poems presented as though they were written by [A greek heroine stood beside Ovidii Heroides]

01:00

heroines of Greek and Roman mythology who were pretty ticked off at their ex's

01:04

and even though people aren't big letter writers these days the epistle's [Boy using a quill to write a letter]

01:08

tradition lives on some writers tell their stories entirely in email or text

01:14

messages whatever it is people are using to communicate anyway back to dracula so

01:18

we know that the novel is this big collection of miscellaneous documents

01:22

but who put it together well our bet is on the mailman. Well, you gotta pass the [Mailman with lots of bags of letters]

01:27

time somehow. But the novel almost gives us an answer whether you noticed

01:30

or not there's an odd little note at the very beginning of the novel how

01:34

these papers have been placed in sequence will be made manifest in the

01:39

reading of them all needless matters have been eliminated so that a history [Portion of the Dracula novel recited]

01:43

almost at variance with the possibilities of latter-day belief may

01:47

stand forth as simple fact there is throughout no statement of past things

01:52

where memory may err for all the records chosen are exactly contemporary

01:56

given from the standpoint and within the range of [Continued reciting of a portion of the Dracula novel]

02:00

knowledge of those who made them

02:03

although this might be better than nothing it still has a lot of hole it's [Man looking puzzled by a hole in the ground]

02:07

unsigned so we don't have a clear idea of who wrote the note, plus even though

02:11

the note assures that needless matters have been eliminated and that the book

02:16

contains no statement of past things where in memory may err well we know

02:20

better than to trust the objectivity of anyone much less an unnamed editor who [A man hiding his face with a paper bag writing the Dracula novel]

02:24

may or may not be hiding their head under a bag one thing that Dracula

02:28

reminds us is that whatever the intentions of the editor sequencing and

02:32

choosing have an effect on the story that's ultimately told we know this [Dracula falls down and a man looks confused]

02:37

novel would have been really different if Dracula himself had been the one

02:40

doing the document compiling and not just because he'd probably get a lot of

02:43

blood stains on the pages [Woman holding a blood-stained book of Dracula written by Dracula himself]

Up Next

A Tale of Two Cities Summary
75858 Views

Meet Charles Darnay, the nobleman who spends more time on trial and in prison than attending balls and drinking expensive wine. Don't feel too bad...

Related Videos

Beowulf
113100 Views

Written in Anglo-Saxon, or Old English, sometime between the 8th and 11th centuries, Beowulf is an epic poem that reflects the early medieval warri...

Brave New World
79224 Views

Brave New World is supposed be an exciting book about a negative utopia and the corrupt powers of authority. So where’s the big car chase? What's...

Dracula
27348 Views

What is Dracula really about? Just Count Dracula? Or is there more to it than vampires? This video addresses some major ideas in Bram Stoker’s cl...

Dracula: Father of the Modern Vampire
17557 Views

There are plenty of famous vampires that send chills up our spines, but Dracula was and still is the king of them all. No one else can touch him. N...