Journal of Dracula Studies

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Alessandra Albano

The Science of Degeneration in Stoker’s Dracula


and Wells’ The Island of Dr. Moreau

Alessandra Albano

[Alessandra Albano graduated from Cornell


University in Spring 2017 with a B.A. in English
Literature, a concentration in literature and politics,
and a minor in Psychology. She is currently pursuing
her Masters in English and American Literature at
New York University. Her current academic interests
include the depiction of race in Victorian literature
and the relationship between late eighteenth and
nineteenth century literature and medicine. She
hopes to continue to research the exchange between
science, society, and literature to elucidate the
influence of scientific theories upon literary
innovation during the nineteenth century.]

The publication of Darwin’s The Descent of Man


and Selection in Relation to Sex, at the time of British
conquest of foreign lands inhabited by other races,
led to an increasing interest in the development of the
different variants of human species. Scientific
theories at the time were employed to justify social
hierarchies abroad and at home as being in accord
with the natural order. Scientific theories of
degeneration were being utilized to explain the
inferiority of the mentally ill and criminals, and to
support the malleability of the human mind and
body, often performed through the controversial
process of vivisection. Furthermore, in an attempt to
align the mentally ill and criminals with a

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The Science of Degeneration

degenerated form of the human species, scientists


developed theories which supported criminal
atavism.
In 1876, Cesare Lombroso further developed his
theory of criminal atavism by studying the corpses
and skulls of known criminals to accumulate a set of
physical characteristics which could identify a
criminal as mentally and physically inferior. These
specific traits were believed to be evidence of less
developed human forms and indicative of a
possibility for human regression:
“The criminal is in atavistic being, a relic of
a vanished race. This is by no means an
uncommon occurrence in nature. Atavism,
the reversion to a former state, is the first
feeble indication of the reaction opposed by
nature to the perturbing causes which seek to
alter her delicate mechanism.”
(Criminal Man 135)
This definition of criminal atavism allows for the
intrusion of external forces, such as disease or
foreign traits, to alter the human race and cause
regression. The belief in the malleability of the
human form created anxiety about human physical
and mental superiority and a fear of profound
regression to a more primitive form of human species
who lack the ability to reason and maintain social
hierarchy.
This language of mental and physical
deterioration became imbedded within the fiction of
the late 1800s, reflecting an increasing anxiety as the
British were forced to question their belief in their
own racial and mental superiority. It has been argued

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Alessandra Albano

that the central reason for the connection between


literature and science at the fin de siècle was the
vagueness of such scientific theories which invited
their application to any person or movement who
threatened traditional Victorian social values. For
example, Max Nordau’s Degeneration Theory was
applied to deem social deviants within the British
Empire, including foreigners, as criminals or
lunatics: “Degeneration theory emerges within the
discourse of Empire, too, as it acts to give a name and
reason to the savagery of Empire, and a justification
for the need to control that space and its ‘child-like’
inhabitant” (Marshall, 7). Specifically, in H.G.
Wells’ The Island of Dr. Moreau (1896) and Bram
Stoker’s Dracula (1897), the language of
degeneration is employed to reflect the fear of human
mental and physical regression that may occur when
coming into contact with a foreign other. Both novels
encapsulate a societal fear of the deleterious effects
of infiltration by a foreign being which may
ultimately lead to a less developed human.
In his publication entitled, Degeneration (1895),
Max Nordau states:
If degeneration is deeper, and ego-mania is
stronger, the latter no longer assumes the
comparatively innocent form of total
absorption in poetic and artistic cooings, but
manifests itself as an immorality, which may
account to moral madness. The tendency to
commit actions injurious to himself or
society is aroused now and then even in a
sane man when some obnoxious desire
demands gratification, but he has the will and

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The Science of Degeneration

the power to suppress it. The degenerate ego-


maniac is too feeble of will to control his
impulsions, and cannot determine his actions
and thoughts by a regard to the welfare of
society. (Nordau 259)
As made evident through these novels, behind
theories which established distinct criteria for racial
hierarchization and mental superiority, a major
societal concern with the ways in which a regression
of the human species could manifest flourished.
Ultimately, when a human regresses, often after
contact with a foreign other, he descends into a state
of madness which renders him primitive. Moreover,
this regression may result in the domination of
primitive sexual or narcissistic impulses for
immediate gratification that ignore the needs of
others or society as a whole. This fear of a regression
into madness where an individual is solely subject to
their primitive instincts pervades both novels.
On an individual level, penetration by a foreign
being causes one to become irrational, impulsive,
and submissive to corporal desires, in essence, one
who presents the symptoms of madness or a wild
animal. In Dracula, Mina explicitly mentions the
theories of Lombroso and Nordau to classify Dracula
as a criminal: “The Count is a criminal and of
criminal type. Nordau and Lombroso would so
classify him, and qua criminal he is of imperfectly
formed mind. Thus, in a difficulty he has to seek
resource in habit” (Stoker 343). The Count, as a
foreign criminal, possesses attributes such as
cleverness and resourcefulness, yet like a criminal or
a lunatic, he is selfish and incapable of more intricate

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Alessandra Albano

intellect. In the words of Dr. Van Helsing in the


novel, Dracula possesses a “child-brain,” one that
functions on routine and replication. Furthermore,
the descriptions of Transylvania and his Castle serve
to depict Dracula as frozen in the past: “Jonathan
Harker’s diary powerfully establishes Transylvania
and Dracula as a distillation of primitive
evolutionary stages- i.e., stages conceived as
fundamentally inferior morally and properly
belonging to the distant past” (Glendening, 131).
Consistent with scientific theories of evolution,
Dracula as a criminal and foreign entity, is a
primitive human form possessing a partially
developed brain and divergent physical qualities.
The initial employment of a language of
degeneration to denote a descent into primitiveness
which manifests as madness is revealed in the
opening letters of Jonathan Harker. Despite an
abundance of warning signs from the Transylvanian
peasants, Harker remains resolute in his decision to
reach the Castle to conduct business with the Count.
Gradually, Harker discovers that the Count’s has
trapped him within the Castle, leading him to
experience vehement emotion:
When I found I was a prisoner a sort of wild
feeling came over me. I rushed up and down
the stairs, trying every door and peering out
of every window I could find; but after a little
the conviction of helplessness overpowered
all other feelings. When I look back after a
few hours I think I must have been mad for
the time, for I behaved much as a rat does in
a trap. (Stoker 32)

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The Science of Degeneration

Harker’s frantic reaction to his realization of


entrapment after contact with Dracula is compared to
an animal like state of bewilderment and submission.
The occurrence of an instinctive regression towards
a state of animality indicates that Harker has lost
touch with his rationality. It is only after he has
performed such senseless actions that he is able to
conclude that he must have been “mad for the time.”
After rationally assessing his agitation, Harker states,
“I am, I know, either being deceived like a baby, by
my own fears, or else I am in desperate straits; and if
the latter be so, I need, all my brains to get through”
(Stoker, 32). This realization that contact with the
Count has the potential to cause mental regression
into a child-like state causes him to realize the urgent
need for him to maintain his own mental stability.
To further evaluate degeneracy in Dracula, it is
critical to analyze Dr. Seward’s mental patient,
Renfield, who is initially introduced as “an
undeveloped homicidal maniac” (Stoker 77),
demonstrating how the language of regression was
applied to institutionalized mental patients.
“Undeveloped” indicates the regressive and
primitive mindset of his patient. Renfield’s
primitive desire to ingest smaller animals in order to
acquire “strong life,” reflects the archaic human
instinct to ingest life in order to sustain life.
Throughout the novel, a degradation into a primitive
state is associated with physical waning and mental
instability. In William Atiken’s The Science and
Practice of Medicine, the definition of a homicidal
maniac is one who is completely driven by

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Alessandra Albano

unrestrained and primitive impulses, yet has the


capacity to appear sensible and careful in his affairs:
Such homicidal impulse and attempts (of
assaults) of the most persistent and dangerous
kind may coexist with a perfect knowledge of
right and wrong, and their bearings on human
actions- with perfect ability also to manage
business affairs, though of a complex
pecuniary character with perfect propriety in
maintaining most of the relationships, or of
discharging most of the social or public
duties of life- with deportment often the most
polished and gentlemanly, the most
considerate and kind. (Aitken 182)
At times throughout the novel, both Renfield and the
Count appear sane and capable of human
communication, even friendship. For example, when
Dr. Seward introduces Van Helsing and the other
men to his patient, Renfield appears completely
rational: “I was so astonished, that the oddness of
introducing a madman in an asylum did not strike me
at the moment; and besides, there was a certain
dignity in the man’s manner, so much of the habit of
equality, that I at once made the introduction”
(Stoker 246).
Perhaps, as Dr. Seward indicates, it is Renfield’s
parcel of reasoning which does in fact distinguish
him from an animal, but certainly does not imply a
human with a fully developed brain: “How well the
man reasoned; lunatics always do within their own
scope” (Stoker 79). This notion of ingesting the life
of another to gain a new and invigorated life is
similar to the ceremony of communion in the

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The Science of Degeneration

Catholic Church. The climactic moment of the


Catholic mass involves ingesting the body,
represented by a wafer, and blood, represented by
wine, of Jesus Christ to attain new life. Throughout
the novel, idolatry and other elements of the Catholic
Church are profoundly associated with
primitiveness. An example can be seen in the
superstitions of the peasants whom Harker
encounters on his way to Dracula’s castle:
One by one several of the passengers offered
me gifts, which would take no denial; these
were certainly of an odd and varied kind, but
each was given in simple good faith, with a
kindly word, and a blessing, and that strange
mixture of fear-meaning movements which I
had seen outside the hotel at Bistritz- the sign
of the cross and the guard against the evil eye.
(Stoker 14)
Therefore, Renfield and Dracula’s exigency to
consume life is aligned with the archaic methods and
superstitions of the Catholicism, the religion most
likely embraced by the peasants.
This categorization of Renfield as a “homicidal
maniac” can be applied to Dracula who is also
believed to be a primitivized human, specifically, a
living being who has lost their humanity, dubbed the
“Undead.” This conception of the “Undead” is
illustrated in Harker’s exclamation upon seeing the
Count scale the wall, “What manner of man is this,
or what manner of creature is it in the semblance of
man?” (Stoker, 40). According to the novel, a
vampire is an individual who exists not only in a state
in between life and death, but also in between an

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Alessandra Albano

ideal human and a brute, primitive form. Although


the Count possesses human characteristics, his
ability to scale the walls and even to control animals
demonstrates his primitive nature. The appearance of
a criminal who possesses the ability to scale walls
was documented by Lombroso, who acquainted
himself with a member of an infamous Italian gang
called Vilella, to bolster his science of criminal
anthropology. According to Lombroso, “the man
possessed such extraordinary agility, that he had
been known to scale steep mountain heights bearing
a sheep on his shoulders,” (Cesare Lombroso,
Introduction) indicating the characteristic trait of
nimbleness associated with criminals and animals in
order to compare them to a more primitive human
form, dependent on impetuous physical action rather
than reason to escape capture.
Although Dracula, like Renfield, is vicious and
gains vitality from the blood of others, he possesses
the ability to appear sociable and rational. Since
Dracula does not have any servants in his
employment, Harker is initially pleased with the
food, the level of comfort at the Castle and Dracula’s
ability to be generous and hospitable. Dracula is
cautious and cunning, asking Harker questions about
London even though it is apparent that he had already
meticulously studied the city and British customs,
and had arranged his financial affairs there. Although
Dracula does ask Harker questions regarding the
British legal system, his knowledge of Britain
exceeds Harker’s knowledge of Transylvania,
indicating his rationality.

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The Science of Degeneration

The fear of mental and physical degradation and


a gradual shutting down of the senses resembles the
process of sleep. Sleep and states of semi-
consciousness symbolize the mental deterioration of
a primitivized human who is incapable of controlling
their actions. These semi- conscious states allow
Dracula to penetrate the mind as well as attack the
bodies of his victims. Since sleep is a gradual
regression into a state of unconsciousness where one
lacks agency, it seems to serve as an ideal place for
an attack of a foreign other. Although sleep is not the
same as degeneracy since it is temporary, and one
can awake restored and enlivened, in the novel, the
concept of sleep is complex. Sleep permits Dracula
to infiltrate the unconscious minds of his victims,
afflict their bodies, and cause them to awaken
enervated and in a sense, degenerated. The process
of dying and then transforming into a vampire is an
overall gradual degeneration of human physical
vitality and mental rationality into a more primitive
form in which one must rely on fundamental instincts
for survival. Therefore, the heightened awareness
surrounding sleep and states of semi-consciousness
in the novel reflects a greater societal concern for the
gradual degeneration of the human body as well as
mental regression into a state of primitiveness.
Sleep as a state of vulnerability is initially presented
in Harker’s first encounter with the three vampiric
women. He is unable to distinguish between sleep
and wakefulness:
The fair girl went on her knees, and bent over
me, fairly gloating. There was a deliberate
voluptuousness which was both thrilling and

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Alessandra Albano

repulsive, and as she arched her neck she


actually licked her lips like an animal, till I
could see in the moonlight the moisture
shining on the scarlet lips and on the red
tongue as it lapped the white sharp teeth.
(Stoker 43)
In this instance, the connection between
primitiveness and hypersexuality, especially
associated with women, is evident since she is lustily
encroaching upon Harker. This portrayal of a woman
is indicative of the societal fear of the differences in
regression between the opposite sexes. Evidently,
female regression culminates in a sexual
insatiability. This proposes the idea of a reverse
Victorian society, in which the current societal
restraints on women are severed, resulting in an
unbounded female sexuality and a powerless and
irrational man who is subject to his corporal desires.
This fear of female liberation as a threat to Victorian
society reflects the New Woman movement, which
is alluded to in the novel in Mina Murray’s journal:
“Some of the ‘New Woman’ writers will someday
start an idea that men and women should be allowed
to see each other before proposing or accepting. But
I suppose the New Woman won’t condescend in
future to accept, she will do the proposing herself.
And a nice job she will make of it too!” (Stoker 98).
This scene with Harker and the three women acts as
an extreme example of the New Woman
movement. Harker’s reaction of pleasure to this
hypersexual woman indicates his desire to surrender
to his primitive sexual instincts, yet because he has
not been initiated into a process of vampirization, he

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The Science of Degeneration

retains some human rationality, which also causes


him to feel disgust at the encounter.
Through Lucy’s transformation into a vampire,
there is a wavering between states of vitality and
weakening which reflects the dominant conception
in science of the instability of the human species and
the possibility to manipulate the human mind and
body to render it more primitive or advanced. The
germ for Lucy’s initiation into the process of
vampiric transformation lies in her tendency to
somnambulate, and it is during one of these episodes
in which the Count initially gains access to her. In
her diary, Mina documents the instance where she
followed Lucy out into the night. She claims,
When I bent over her I could see that she was
still asleep. Her lips were parted, and she was
breathing- not softly as usual with her, but in
long heavy gasps, as though striving to get
her lungs full at every breath. At first she did
not respond; but gradually she became more
and more uneasy in her sleep, moaning and
sighing occasionally. (Stoker 99-100)
The paradox of pain and pleasure is substantiated in
the contradiction between Lucy’s moaning and
sighing. Moaning seems to indicate pain, but could
also signify a longing, perhaps a sexual longing for
the Count, alongside sighing, which can be indicative
of pleasure and fulfillment.
After being infiltrated by the Count, Lucy’s strength
increases at nighttime, where she appears vitalized
and possesses a primitive fierceness:
At times, she slept and both Van Helsing and
I noticed the difference in her, between

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Alessandra Albano

sleeping and waking. Whilst asleep she


looked stronger, although more haggard, and
her breathing was softer; her open mouth
showed the pale gums drawn back from the
teeth, which looked positively longer and
sharper than usual; when she woke the
softness of her eyes evidently changed the
expression, for she looked her own self,
although a dying one. (Stoker 158)
The animal like quality of sharp teeth which is
enhanced while asleep supports the notion that a state
in which one lacks agency and self- awareness will
inevitably regress to a reliance upon primitive
instincts. Like the Count, her rigor will no longer be
manifested in her waking body during the daytime,
rather her primitive vitality will dominate at night.
As in Harker’s encounter with the three vampiric
women in the Castle, as Lucy progresses in her
transformation into a vampire, she also attains a
sexualized beauty. The struggle which the men
experience in restraining their sexual desire also
connotes a primitivizing of the men after
encountering a vampiric Lucy. Throughout the
novel, there are various instances where the men
assert dominance by contending that they possess the
power to defeat the Count and prevent him from
preying upon the women, yet they continuously fail,
often times due to an inability to resist sleep. This
failure to satisfy their social roles is symptomatic of
social degeneration through sustained contact with a
primitivized other. There is a fear that continued
contact with foreigners will lead to an uprooting and

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The Science of Degeneration

eventual dissolution of rigid social roles, resulting in


an unrestrained primitiveness.
A dissolution of social constraints during sleep
not only serves as a gateway an into primitiveness
and madness, but also permits access for a foreign
other. While the Count is able to invade Lucy during
her somnambulant states, Doctor Van Helsing, a
foreigner from Amsterdam, can track the Count
through hypnotizing Mina. Hypnotism, as a state
between waking and sleeping, allows Van Helsing to
gain access to Mina’s subconscious which is
inextricably bound to the Count. Stoker’s decision to
employ hypnotism as a form of communication
between Van Helsing and the Count reflects the
extensive exchange occurring between literature and
science at the time the novel was written:
Scientific orthodoxy and literary authority
were constantly in flux throughout the
nineteenth century/ To investigate literary
mesmerism is to unveil the reactions and
responses, the interventions and influences of
one of the key forms of knowledge that the
Victorians used to define their sense of self
and society. (Willis and Wynne 7)
The concern with hypnotism throughout various
novels published in the 19 century, including
th

Dracula and The Island of Dr. Moreau, illustrates the


influence of science upon literature, especially a
domain of science such as hypnotism which was
believed to be a door to the unconscious. The science
of hypnotism is employed as a literary technique to
allow the reader access to the Count’s intentions and
reinforces the conception of the mind as well as the

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Alessandra Albano

body as subject to regression and manipulation by an


external force.
The fact that Mina devises the plan for her
hypnosis on a night filled with restless sleep and at a
time when the Count is most active, solidifies their
connection and reduces Mina to a more primitive
state. It is also valuable to consider the gender
dynamics at play in the initial scene of hypnotism
since this developing method to treat madness was
applied to women more often than to men. It would
seem inconsistent with societal norms if the Count
decided to mentally communicate with one of the
male figures: “Misogyny permeates much of the
mesmeric literature, particularly as female mesmeric
knowledge was often perceived as emasculating. In
addition, the conception of the female as a passive
agent tended to reinforce gender hierarchies” (Willis
and Wynne 9).
With earnestness, Mina, as the only woman of the
group, entreats Van Helsing to hypnotize her since it
appears to be a time sensitive procedure:
Gradually her eyes closed, and she sat, stock
still; only by the gentle heaving of her bosom
could one know that she was alive. The
Professor made a few more passes and then
stopped, and I could see that his forehead was
covered with great beads of perspiration.
Mina opened her eyes; but she did not seem
the same woman. There was a far away look
in her eyes, and her voice had a sad
dreaminess which was new to me. (Stoker
313)

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Like with Lucy, the Count connects with Mina in this


semiconscious state, but, in this instance, it is Dr.
Van Helsing who is acting as a foreign other to
penetrate the subconscious. In order to understand
Mina’s mental and physical descent into a primitive
state of madness, it is valuable to analyze what that
behavior implies:
We have of late come to understand that
sunrise and sunset are to her times of peculiar
freedom; when her old self can be manifest
without any controlling force subduing or
restraining her, or inciting her to action. / At
first there is a sort of negative condition, as if
some tie were loosened, and then the absolute
freedom quickly follows; when however the
freedom ceases the change-back or relapse
comes quickly, preceded only by a spell of
warning silence. (Stoker 330)
These episodes indicate a lack of restraint and
poignant impulsivity, similar to what deems Renfield
as a “homicidal maniac.” Since Mina has not fully
entered into the process of vampiric transformation,
she still retains aspects of her fully human self and
rationality, but quickly relapses into a mad state. This
sudden change into a degenerated mental state
reflects the societal fear of the unpredictability of the
regression of humanity.
Bram Stoker’s Dracula posits that natural forces,
such as contact with a foreign other and lack of
agency in states of semi consciousness, can instigate
the primitivizing of the human species. However, in
H.G. Wells’ The Island of Dr. Moreau, it is the will
of the mad scientist to manipulate the body and mind

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to select desired traits. The publication of Darwin’s


On the Origin of Species (1859) propelled British
society to confront the notion of the natural evolution
of the human species, which led them to question the
origin of reason and human morality: “The key is
man’s power of accumulative selection: nature gives
successive variations; man adds them up in certain
directions useful to him. In this sense he may be said
to have made for himself useful breeds” (Darwin 34).
Man’s manipulation of nature, specifically animals
of a lesser form, certainly influenced Wells’
development of his character of Dr. Moreau who is a
firm proponent of vivisection. This controversial
scientific process conceived of the human body as
mechanical, made up of varied parts which could be
dismantled. According to Claude Bernard,
to uncover the inner or hidden parts of the
organisms and see them work; to this sort of
operation we give the name of vivisection,
and without this mode of investigation,
neither physiology nor scientific medicine is
possible; to learn how man and animals live,
we cannot avoid seeing great numbers of
them die, because the mechanisms of life can
be unveiled and proved only by knowledge of
the mechanisms of death. (Bernard 99)
In order for science to progress and better human
kind, Bernard and other proponents of vivisection
believed that by manipulating and even annihilating
lesser forms of life, it was possible to discover the
mechanisms of human life which was considered
superior. Vivisection was considered a unique
process which could allow scientists access to vital

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The Science of Degeneration

knowledge of the human body and further


physiology and the treatment of disease. Essentially,
this reasoning mirrors that of Renfield, Dr. Seward’s
mental patient in Stoker’s Dracula: to prolong
human life, it is necessary to sacrifice lesser forms of
it.
Moreau’s success in vivisection is in part due to
his belief that one’s ability to feel pain and allow that
pain to dominate and restrain action makes one an
animal:
In my view- in my view. For it is just the
question of pain that parts us. So long as
visible or audible pain turns you sick; so long
as your own pain drives you; so long as pain
underlies your propositions about sin- so
long, I tell you, you are an animal, thinking a
little less obscurely what an animal feels.
(Wells 126)
Surrender to the sensation of pain is animalistic and
an indicator of a primitive human. Prendick’s
sympathy with the puma and other vivisected
animals depicts him as more primitive and subject to
the control of his emotions.
Moreau’s belief in “the plasticity of living
forms,” does not solely include the physical, but also
mental manipulation:
A pig may be educated. The mental structure
is even less determinate than the bodily. In
our growing science of hypnotism we find the
promise of a possibility of superseding old
inherent instincts by new suggestions,
grafting upon or replacing the inherited fixed
ideas. (Wells 125)

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By stating that a pig’s ability to learn is similar to that


of the human due to similar mental structure allows
him to consider animal forms and human forms as
equivalent. Reducing the human ability to learn to
that of a pig is indicative of similar mental structures
which allow for reason and place the human form as
exchangeable to that of the animal. Both forms are
subject to manipulation through the power of
suggestion.
The Island of Dr. Moreau demonstrates the
anxiety surrounding the malleability and the likeness
of the human species to lesser animal forms by
nourishing the idea that through vivisection, it is
indeed possible to physically manipulate animal
forms to transform them into more advanced
humans. The difficulty and confusion in discerning
between animal and human forms experienced by the
protagonist, Prendick, introduces the notion that
humans and lesser animal forms are more alike than
an English readership would want to believe. The
emphasis on racialized facial features reflects the
dominant notion at the time that the European race
was superior to the African race. Thus, since
Africans would be considered as more primitive and
less distant from animals on an evolutionary scale,
the Beast People possess more African like physical
features:
In some indefinable way the black face thus
flashed upon me shocked me profoundly. It
was a singularly deformed one. The facial
part projected, forming something dimly
suggestive of a muzzle, and the huge half-
open mouth showed as big white teeth as I

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The Science of Degeneration

had ever seen in a human mouth. His eyes


were blood-shot at the edges, with scarcely a
rim of white round the hazel pupils. (Wells
78)
The descriptors employed to paint a picture of one of
the Beast people are reminiscent of Stoker’s
description of Count Dracula and other “undead”
individuals. Throughout Dracula, there are constant
references to “red gleaming eyes,” (Stoker 99)
“white sharp teeth,” and as Dracula being surrounded
by “piteous howling of dogs” (Stoker 50). Moreover,
Dracula is described by Harker as possessing animal
like qualities, including excessive body hair, pointed
ears, and
the mouth, so far as I could see it under the
heavy moustache, was fixed and rather cruel
looking, with peculiarly sharp teeth; these
protruded over the lips, whose remarkable
ruddiness showed astonishing vitality in a
man of his years. The general effect was one
of extraordinary pallor. (Stoker 22)
The intense focus on the deformed mouths in both
descriptions is reflective of the science of the time
which often specifically highlighted this portion of
the face as different to establish white European
superiority. For example, in Lombroso’s “Criminal
Man,” he describes criminals as possessing:
The Mouth. This part shows perhaps a greater
number of anomalies than any other facial
organ. This muscle, (canine muscle) which is
strongly developed in the dog, serves when
contracted to draw back the lip leaving the
canines exposed. The lips of violators of

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women and murderers are fleshy, swollen


and protruding as in negroes. (Criminal Man
242)
Regarding the teeth, Lombroso remarks, “In 4% of
(of criminals) the canines are very strongly
developed, long, sharp, and curving inwardly as in
carnivores” (Criminal Man 242). Pointed ears are
another common physical trait between the Count
and the Beast people. The principle difference
between these two accounts seems to be complexion.
The Beast People possess dark skin while Dracula
and his victims possess “extraordinary pallor.” This
difference in complexion reflects leading scientific
theories at the time which articulate climatological
differences as the source for varying racial
complexion. This understanding of racial difference
as determined by climate initially began in the 1700s,
but continued to develop as imperial conquests
expanded.
Although the Beast People may resemble
humans in their physicality, their cognitive abilities
are regressed. They are under the control of Dr.
Moreau and do not fully possess the mental capacity
for independent thought and rationality. In the ritual
scene, the Beast People gather together and recite the
Law:
Not to go on all-fours; that is the Law. Are
we not Men?
Not to suck up Drinks; that is the Law. Are
we not men?
Not to eat Flesh or Fish; that is the Law. Are
we not Men?

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The Science of Degeneration

Not to claw the bark of Trees; that is the Law.


Are we not Men?
Not to chase other Men; that is the law. Are
we not men? (Wells 114)
This recitation is similar to that of a creed or a moral
code usually dictated by religious or social
institutions. However, the fact that each statement of
the creed terminates in a question points to a certain
ambiguity, essentially asking, what is it exactly that
distinguished Man from Animal? Man indeed still
does possess the ability to go on all fours and perform
the actions the Beast people are told not to do.
Therefore, this creed is suggesting that there is in fact
not a profound difference between primitive and
rational man, but rather an instilled set of social
structures which make man believe he is more
advanced. Due to their mental inferiority, the way in
which they learn how to behave is through cognitive
recitation and repetition, similar to how Van Helsing
described Dracula, and not through their own
actions, further rendering them as degenerated forms
who are unable to produce their own ideas.
Additionally, the creed serves as a structure created
by Dr. Moreau, a “superior” white European male, to
keep the Beast People under control, supporting the
notion that mentally ill and colonized people need to
be under strict authority to ensure that they do not
continue to regress into a state of primitive madness.
After Dr. Moreau, their leader, dies, there is
indeed a gradual regression to a more primitive state
among the Beast people:
Some of the others seemed altogether
slipping their hold upon speech, though they

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Alessandra Albano

still understood what I said to them at the


time. (Can you imagine language once clear
cut and exact, softening and guttering, losing
shape and import, becoming mere lumps of
sound again?) And they walked erect with
increasing difficulty. They held things more
clumsily; drinking by suction, feeding by
gnawing, grew commoner every day. They
were reverting and reverting very rapidly.
(Wells 167)
Mental regression is exemplified through the Beast
People’s loss of the ability to manipulate sounds to
produce language for communication and
expression. Often, scientific theories at the time
suggested that human aptitude to produce language
distinguished them from beasts and deemed them as
superior. Perhaps what is most appalling about this
passage is the rapidity in which the Beast People,
without a cognitively advanced leader to command
them, regress into animality. This suggests that the
human species could regress suddenly and further
obfuscates the divide between animal and man.
This rapid mental and social degeneration is
especially evident in the female creatures. This
depiction of women as more easily susceptible to
primitivizing and madness reflects the scientific
reasoning of the time which insinuates that female
minds and bodies are weaker and more prone to
deterioration in the absence of external structure.
This logic implies that the female sex is more
primitive and has a greater inclination to more
rapidly regress:

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The Science of Degeneration

Some of them- the pioneers in this, I noticed


with some surprise, were all females- began
to disregard the injunction of decency,
deliberately for the most part. Others even
attempted public outrages upon the
institution of monogamy. The tradition of the
Law was clearly losing its force. I cannot
pursue this disagreeable subject. (Wells 167)
The females are freed from the creed and become
aggressively sexual similar to the vampiric women in
Stoker’s Dracula. The disgust Prendick experiences,
like the horror the men experience in Dracula, results
from the connection between insatiable sexual desire
and primitiveness. According to Lombroso, it is this
exact quality of sexual urgency for women which
characterizes a prostitute as savage:
The very precocity of prostitutes- the
precocity which increases their apparent
beauty- is primarily attributable to atavism.
Due also to it is the virility underlying the
female type; for what we look for most in the
female is femininity, and when we find the
opposite in her we conclude as a rule that
there must be some anomaly. And in order to
understand the significance and the atavistic
origin of this anomaly; we have only to
remember that virility was one of the special
features of the savage woman. (The Female
Offender 112)
This account of female regression as intrinsically
linked to heightened sexual desire and enhanced
physical beauty is manifested in both Mina and Lucy
after contact with the Count. Sexual ferociousness is

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considered a male trait, connected with virility, but


when it is prominent in a female, she is considered to
be barbaric. This association between women with
great sexual interest and primitiveness is in part why
Prendick is filled with disgust at the sight of the
severing of monogamous relationships instigated by
the female Beast People. As a male in a society
which insists on female sexual restraint, Prendick is
intrinsically attracted to feminine sexual temerity,
and it is their deviant behavior which he finds
unbearable, ultimately preventing him from pursuing
“this disagreeable subject.”
Perhaps the most striking example of mental
regression is evident in Prendick himself, who, after
failing to manipulate the Beast People, also begins to
descend into a state of animality:
I too must have undergone strange changes.
My clothes hung about me as yellow rags,
through whose rents showed the tanned skin.
My hair grew long and became matted
together. I am told that even my eyes have a
strange brightness. A swift alertness of
movement. (Wells 168)
Prendick’s mental regression is made evident in his
inability to devise an effective plan to escape. He
often spends his days watching the absent sea which
mirrors his thoughtless mind. Like Dr. Seward’s
patient, Renfield in Stoker’s Dracula, outbursts of
wild frustration mark his descent into a mental
primitiveness: “Sometimes I would give way to wild
outbursts of rage, and hack and splinter some
unlucky tree in my intolerable vexation. But I could
think of nothing” (Wells 170).

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The Science of Degeneration

When Prendick returns to civilization, he is


shrouded in gloom and unable to see the world as
animated and filled with purposeful people:
Particularly nauseous were the blank,
expressionless faces of people in trains and
omnibuses; they seemed no more my fellow
creatures than dead bodies would be, so that
I did not dare to travel unless I was assured of
being alone. And even it seemed that I too
was not a reasonable creature, but only an
animal tormented with some strange disorder
in its brain which sent it to wander alone, like
a sheep stricken with gid. (Wells 173)
Pendick’s experience with the frailty and
malleability of human life causes him to see his
fellow humans as thoughtless animals, inhabiting a
meaningless cycle of life. His desire to retreat from
urbanization likens Prendick to a mental patient,
even more specifically, to Renfield in Dracula.
While Prendick searches for life and meaning
through books, Renfield, as a more primitivized and
institutionalized mental patient, fuels his quest for
life by consuming small animals. For Prendick,
cognitive immersion through a pursuit of knowledge
seems to save him from a retreat into a primitive
animality, while Renfield believes he can triumph
over human meaninglessness by ingesting other
forms of life.
Scientific theories of the origin of human life
propelled 19th century English society to confront
their evolutionary history. As imperialism flourished
and contact with foreigners became inevitable,
scientific theories were applied to justify racial

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Alessandra Albano

classification as well as account for deviant social


behavior at home. Scientific theories such as
Lombroso’s Criminal Atavism and Nordau’s
Degeneration Theory explained the inferiority of
criminals, foreigners, and the mentally ill. The
pervasiveness of such scientific theories throughout
19th century society indubitably infiltrated the
literary imagination as evidenced in novels such as
Stoker’s Dracula and Well’s The Island of Doctor
Moreau. Although 19th century scientific theory is
suffused with inaccuracies, it is compelling to think
about the potential stagnancy of literature if writers
did not incorporate the scientific understanding of
the mystery of human life. Ultimately, this exchange
invites readers to consider the interplay between
society, science, and literature today.

Works Cited
Aitken, William. The Science and Practice of
Medicine. Lindsay & Blakiston, 1872.
Bernard, Claude. An Introduction to the Study of
Experimental Medicine. 1865. Translated by
Henry Copley Green, Dover, 1957.
Darwin, Charles. On the Origin of Species. Appleton
and Co., 1859.
Glendening, John. The Evolutionary Imagination in
Late Victorian Novels. Ashgate Publishing,
2007.
Lombroso, Cesare. Criminal Man. 1887. Translated
by Mary Gibson, Nicole Hahn Rafter, Duke
University Press, 2006.
Lombroso, Cesare. The Female Offender. D.
Appleton, 1895.

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The Science of Degeneration

Marshall, Gail, editor. The Cambridge Companion to


the Fin de Siècle. Cambridge University Press,
2007.
Mikkelsen, Jon. Kant and the Concept of Race: Late
Eighteenth-Century Writings, State University of
New York Press, 2004.
Nordau, Max. Degeneration. D. Appleton &
Company, 1895.
Stoker, Bram. Dracula. Edited by Andrew
Elfenbien, Pearson Education, Inc., 2011.
Wells, H.G. The Island of Doctor Moreau. Edited by
Mason Harris, Broadview Editions, 2009.
Willis, Martin and Catherine Wynne. Victorian
Literary Mesmerism. Editions Rodopi, 2006.

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