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Dracula: Characters

Stoker uses the literary style known as an epistolary novel to tell the story via multiple narrative perspectives. The narrative is not only constructed through diary entries, but also through telegrams, letters, newspaper articles and business reports. This could therefore suggest that the narrative is unreliable and the reader cannot form a strong connection with any of the characters. This gives the reader the decision of how to view the characters, based on what is gathered from the information given. Characters can be also symbolic, representing certain ideas or ideals, so it is essential that you consider:

  • how characters are established

  • how characters are presented via:

    • actions and motives

    • what they say and think

    • how they interact with others

    • what others say and think about them

    • their physical appearance or description

  • how far the characters conform to or subvert stereotypes

  • the relationships between characters

  • what they might represent

Below you will find detailed character profiles for the major characters in Dracula, along with a summary of the other significant characters.

Major characters

  • Dracula

  • Jonathan Harker

  • Mina Harker

  • Dr Seward

  • Dr Van Helsing

Other characters

  • Lucy Westenra

  • Arthur Holmwood/Lord Godalming 

  • Quincey P Morris

  • Renfield

Examiner Tips and Tricks

In the exam, the idea of character as a conscious construct should be evident throughout your response. There have been many different adaptations of Dracula in film and television since its publication, but you should try to avoid seeing the original characters as “early versions” of characters that you are familiar with through popular culture.

Instead, focus solely on the text, and your analysis of characters should be literary rather than influenced by other versions or representations.

Dracula

draculacharacter-dracula
  • Dracula is the antagonist of the story and a vampire:

    • However, we do not see the story unfold from his perspective

  • Jonathan Harker’s journal is crucial to Dracula’s characterisation, as it gives us the most detailed description of the character:

    • Harker is also the only character who spends a significant amount of time with Dracula

    • Harker’s journals do not explicitly state that he is a vampire as Harker does not consider this

    • Instead, he is presented as a sinister and creepy character who cannot be trusted

  • The reader is not told Dracula’s age, though it can be inferred through the stories that he tells Harker that he may be hundreds of years old

  • He is first presented to us through the character of Harker:

    • Initially he seems charming, polite and well-educated

    • However, physically, Dracula is described by Harker in a negative way

    • His mouth is described as “cruel looking” and Harker comments on his “sharp white teeth”

  • It is clear that he is of noble blood and he comes from a long line of aristocracy:

    • However, his thirst for blood and power make him a direct contrast to the character of Lord Godalming 

  • He possesses supernatural abilities and powers:

    • He has super strength and the ability to control animals such as wolves

    • He is also able to shapeshift into mist and animals

    • He has no reflection

  • He feeds off people and infects them with his vampirism as he drains the blood from them

  • Dracula is well-read and has an excellent knowledge of the world around him:

    • He recounts tales of his family and their former glory to Harker

  • It is clear that Dracula has a plan and had done his research before he moved to London

  • He shows no remorse or any kindness to any character he comes close to:

    • He leaves Harker to die in the castle when he has no more use for him

    • He slowly drains Lucy of life and turns her into a vampire

    • He uses characters such as the crew on the ship and Renfield to do his bidding and kills them when he no longer needs them or if they try to fight him (as was the case with Renfield)

  • Dracula seems merciless and relentless in his pursuit to execute his plan:

    • He arrogantly tells Van Helsing that “others shall yet be mine”, which highlights his desire to dominate

  • He is eventually killed by Quincey P Morris and the other men who pursue him in Transylvania

  • His bloodline, personality and actions suggest that he is selfish and driven by his desire to overpower and overthrow

  • Dracula represents the idea of the “other” and is a foreigner in England at the time the novel was written

  • He is mentioned throughout the novel and is the central focus for the other characters, but only appears properly three times: 

    • At the beginning in Castle Dracula

    • When he bites Mina

    • When the men are pursuing him in Piccadilly 

  • At the end of the novel, he wakes seconds before he is killed: 

    • His look of triumph is replaced with a “look of peace”, which surprises Mina Harker

    • It could be suggested that he has been released from his own painful existence, which may lead us to conclude that Dracula may have also been a prisoner like Lucy

Jonathan Harker

draculacharacter-jonathanharker
  • Jonathan Harker is a young solicitor from London:

    • He has been sent by his firm on a business trip to Transylvania

    • His job is to secure and finalise a real estate deal with Count Dracula

  • His diary entries account for a significant portion of the novel and we begin the story with his entries

  • He spends the most significant amount of time with Count Dracula and we learn about the vampire through his perspective:

    • He lives with the Count during his stay at Transylvania and ultimately escapes death

  • Harker can initially be seen as naive as he does not take the villagers’ warnings seriously

  • His initial impressions of Dracula are that he is noble and polite, but he soon realises that he is not to be trusted:

    • Dracula’s appearance also unnerves Harker, but he appears passive during his stay at Castle Dracula

  • Harker initially does not seem strong enough to kill Dracula on his own:

    • He is essentially trapped in the castle and is at a loss over what to do

    • He decides to explore the castle to find a way out

  • Through Harker’s diary entries, we get an insight into his fragile state of mind and his fears and weaknesses:

    • He openly writes about almost being seduced by the female vampires in Castle Dracula and writes of his shame

  • It is worth noting that during his imprisonment at the castle, Harker’s masculinity is replaced with the image of a “damsel in distress” linked to traditional fairy tales:

    • He is trapped and overpowered by a man who is, as he says himself, stronger than he is

    • He cannot escape and is confined to his room

    • He is left to be killed by an evil woman (or women)

  • His masculinity is restored when he decides to climb down the castle wall so that he can rest “as a man”

  • We next hear of Harker through Mina’s letters and diary entries:

    • He is recovering in a hospital in Buda-Pesth as he is still haunted by the events that he witnessed at the castle

    • He returns to London but is still weakened by what he saw and does not believe in himself

  • His reaction to seeing Dracula in London make it evident that he was still shaken by the events that took place in Transylvania:

    • It is clear that, at this point, he doubts his own abilities and his role

  • It is Jonathan’s meeting with Van Helsing that restores his self-confidence, as Van Helsing assures him that what he saw at Castle Dracula was not a figment of his imagination:

    • This makes him feel like “a new man” and his fear vanishes

    • This also motivates Harker to join the men in their pursuit to kill Dracula

  • Near the end of the novel, it is evident that Harker feels guilt over what happened to Mina:

    • His anger spurs him to pursue Dracula and Mina tries to calm him in order to make him see sense and reasoning, as he is described “like a living flame”

    • He states that he is willing to sell his soul to see Dracula destroyed

    • He agrees to withhold information from Mina in order to protect her, as he feels this is his duty

  • His love for Mina is also evident as declares that he is willing to become a vampire in order to be with Mina

  • He finally gets his revenge and redemption at the end of the novel, as he successfully manages to destroy Dracula with the rest of the men

Mina Murrey (née Harker)

draculacharacter-minaharker
  • Mina Murrey is first introduced through Harker’s diary entries: 

    • We find out that she is engaged to Harker

    • He describes her as the ideal woman when comparing her to the female vampires in Dracula’s castle

  • Mina is shown to have many virtuous characteristics and traits:

    • She is described as faithful and loyal

    • She is clearly a nurturer and is willing to take care of those she loves, including Lucy

    • She is also driven by her desire to be a good wife, so she learns shorthand and typewriting in order to help her fiancé/husband

  • Mina is a teacher by trade, but takes on many roles throughout the novel:

    • She acts as Lucy’s companion at Whitby at the start of the novel

    • She then becomes her husband’s carer and nurse as well as his wife

    • She is pivotal to the men’s mission as she compiles and organises all of the information they need

    • She is then used as a key into Dracula’s location through hypnosis

  • Van Helsing meets Mina as he realises that she witnessed the early stages of Lucy’s encounter with Dracula

  • The other characters praise her for being intelligent, courageous and for having a good temperament

  • Mina becomes Dracula’s next target:

    • Dracula visits Mina several times and drains her blood

    • Mina does not seem to realise this, though she writes about a mist entering her room

    • Also, the men do not realise and think her weakness and pale face are a typical female response to the topic of discussion

    • They realise when they find her sucking Dracula’s blood from his chest and, as a result, she labels herself as “unclean” 

    • She feels humiliated and that she has been tainted by what Dracula has done

  • As the men hunt for Dracula, Mina resolves that she will die on her own terms:

    • She makes the men take a solemn oath that they will kill her before she becomes a vampire

    • Her bravery and courage can be seen in her resolve to make her own decisions rather than succumb to the infection

  • When Mina becomes infected, Van Helsing tries to bless her by using a communion wafer:

    • This burns her forehead and leaves a scar, leading the others to realise that she is being transformed and corrupted

    • The burn mark may symbolise her falling from grace and her impurity 

    • When Dracula is killed, the burn mark disappears, thereby suggesting that her purity and goodness is restored

  • Van Helsing describes her as having feminine virtues but a man’s brain:

    • His “compliment” highlights how she was more forward thinking than women of that time, as she displayed a strength of character that was traditionally associated with men

    • He clearly greatly admires her and respects her intelligence

  • Through Mina, the themes relating to purity and corruption are explored as she represents feminine ideals of that time

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