COSTA, É. N. S.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/4887295109671940; COSTA, Érica Nayara da Silva.
Resumo:
Postcolonial studies can be understood as a area of human sciences which analyzes the
relations between the countries called Empire and their colonies; as a colonization
affected these environments, and how literature portrays such issues. Thus, this paper
analyze from a postcolonial perspective the Gothic novel Dracula (1897), written by the
Irish writer Bram Stoker (1847 - 1912). The story that tells of the journey of the
Englishman Jonathan Harker to the Carpathian region shows, for example, how
European men and women from different parts of the continente were treated by the
imperialista Victorian gaze. In this context, is analyzed the relations of opposition
between England and Ireland; genderrelations, notably the role of woman; the writing
context of the novel, Transylvania and England. This paper consists also of a
bibliographical and analytical feature about the life and work of Stoker, applying to the
chosen literary corpus, the postcolonial theories. For such na enterprise, we will use the
theoretical suport of Bonnici (2000), Spivak (2010), Said (2011), Césaire (1978), among
others.