The Exorcist or Children of Men. This Paper Will Examine How Fantasy and The Idea of
The Exorcist or Children of Men. This Paper Will Examine How Fantasy and The Idea of
The Exorcist or Children of Men. This Paper Will Examine How Fantasy and The Idea of
Dan Marr
ENG 323-11500-22132943
1 April 2011
Bram Stoker’s Dracula debuted in Victorian England at the end of the nineteenth
century. Not the first vampire story of its time, it certainly made one of the most lasting
possession, demoniacs, vampires, werewolves, zombies, aliens, and monsters of all kinds
have become something of a theme in modern art, if not an obsession. Many scholars
debate the origin or cause of this phenomenon, yet most agree that culture plays an
enormous role in the development of such themes, whether in nineteenth century gothic
novels such as Dracula or Frankenstein, or in modern films with gothic leanings, such as
The Exorcist or Children of Men. This paper will examine how fantasy and the idea of
the supernatural, including the “undead,” is an important underlying fear prevalent in the
historical circumstances which spawns the creation of that work of literature or film.
Shelley found their ultimate expression in the gothic horror genre (90). Dracula, no less
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than Frankenstein, is indicative of the cultural underbelly that the Victorian Age sought
to cover up. Far from speaking directly of the human passions unleashed by the
Romantic era, the Victorian Age found it more appropriate to hide them, keep them out
of the public sphere, render them lifeless, and thereby make life respectable. The
problem was, the less those passions were talked about, but acted upon, the more those
same passions bubbled up to the surface through the means of gothic horror novels and
films. While, Oscar Wilde’s “art for art’s sake” carried the artistic world out of the
Victorian Age and into the twentieth century of unhindered expressionism, Wilde himself
fell victim to the very underbelly of Victorian England—which, in fact, prosecuted him
to the fullest extent of the law when his vices became open knowledge to the public.
Stoker’s Dracula was just as representative of his own sexual desires masked by
Victorian prudery. But because Stoker for the most part kept his affairs from becoming
public scandal, he was left well enough alone to express what everyone was interested in
Controlling the passions had always been the interest of the Catholic Church,
which was the European bulwark against revolution, with assistance from the reason of
With the growing corruption of many Church officials, the rise of the Renaissance and
the Protestant Reformation, that control was finally threatened and replaced. New
philosophies were spread (Rousseau’s concept of nature as the only law; Sade’s concept
of that same nature as brutal, animalistic, and violent), which unleashed a tidal wave of
radical revolutionaries in Paris at the end of the eighteenth century, which in turn needed
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new types of control. Napoleon was the immediate result. Victorian prudery was the
nineteenth century’s later response. It enabled Mary Shelley to turn her husband into a
“Victorian angel,” as she “dedicated the rest of her life to effacing their sexual
experiment” (Jones 91) with Byron in Geneva, memorialized, however, by Ken Russell’s
1987 film Gothic, in which de Sade’s Justine informs Mary Shelley of what could soon
be expected.
What Sade foresaw, and helped promote, was a sexual revolution that would
elevate sexual desire from the restraints of medieval Church doctrine. While that
alternate development got underway in which that same elevation of sexual license was
to be used itself as a form of control. In fact, Augustine had spoken of such centuries
before when he wrote that a man has as many masters as he has vices. Sade’s assessment
was similar in the eighteenth century: “The state of the moral man is one of tranquility
and peace; the state of an immoral man is one of perpetual unrest” (Jones 6). Yet, while
Augustine promoted peace, Sade, who exercised some political sway in the Reign of
Terror, promoted unrest: “By promoting vice, the regime promotes slavery, which can be
fashioned into a form of political control” (Jones 6). Such was in line with Robespierre’s
doctrine of terror as persuasion. Stoker’s Dracula was an expression of just such an idea
—for Stoker himself knew the validity of both those claims: a seducer of young women,
Stoker doubtlessly identified with Jonathan Harker and Dracula, the captive and master
all at once.
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The vampire became a persona of iconic horror status in film in the following
century. The concept of the walking “undead” who fed on the blood of innocents
conjured up something so profound and stimulating in the minds of audiences all over the
world that vampirism was everywhere, from Nosferatu to Bela Lugosi to Carl Theodor
Dreyer’s Vampyr. Dreyer, who had shot what is considered one of the greatest silent
films of all time, The Passion of Joan of Arc, found his inspiration for his vampire film in
the likes of Magnus Hirschfeld. Hirschfeld was an honorary member of the British
Society for Sexual Psychology and something of a movie star himself in Weimar
homosexual film Anders als die Andern” (Jones 194). The themes of sexual license and
control had a significant impact on Germany. Sigmund Freud would take up the themes
appeasing the subconscious. In Dr. Seward’s diary, one finds no less: a blood
transfusion is given to Lucy by Van Helsing, who states, “She wants blood, and blood she
must have or die” (Stoker 123). Lucy has been bitten by the vampire and become, in a
sense, contaminated. The only scientific cure is to give her want she wants: blood. The
allusion to another blood exchange is obvious—but the sense is inverted: While T.S.
Eliot states in Murder in the Cathedral the relationship between Christian sacrifice and
control of the passions (“His Blood for ours, Blood for blood”), Enlightenment science
Jones speaks of the sexual revolution that ran concomitantly with the French
Revolution as the real forbearer of gothic horror. Whereas gothic cathedrals reinforced
through visual representation the horror of Satan and sin, modern gothic horror does the
same—though the solution is different (if there is one, and there often is not: the
immortal evil of Michael Myers, Jason, Krueger, etc. suggests that while Christ was the
answer for Augustine and Aquinas, the Enlightenment has yet to formulate any
acceptable solution). Meanwhile, the manipulation of desire, Jones notes, has found its
way out of Victorian prudery and into the mainstream through advertising, radio,
television, music, and cinema. The fantasy of the “undead” in the George A. Romero
franchise, which is still being updated, suggests a kind of public response to the world
uncontrolled passions, yet still living, shopping, attending to social rituals. The sexual
revolution and Enlightenment doctrine of the 1790s and early twentieth century
resurfaced in full throttle in the 1960s and 70s, to create a new wave of liberal social
The nosferatu do not die like the bee when he sting once. He is only stronger; and
being stronger, have yet more power to work evil. This vampire…is of himself so
strong in person as twenty men; he is of cunning more than mortal…he have still
the aids of necromancy, and all the dead that he can come nigh to are for him to
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command; he is brute, and more than brute; he is devil in callous, and the heart of
The portrayal is Satanic, and a similar portrayal would be given in 1973’s The Exorcist,
in which Satan possesses a girl through the medium of a children’s game (the Ouija
board). Yet, with The Exorcist, the spiritual evil is made much more real than the
fantastic evil of Dracula. And while Dracula is destroyed by a stake, the devil is
dispelled only through the power of Christ in The Exorcist. Ironically, however, the devil
is driven out only after the death of not one but two priests—the old man initially, and
then the younger priest, whose own crisis of faith becomes a kind of despair at the end of
the film, when, ceasing to compel Satan through Christ, he cries, “Take me!” instead, and
then throws himself out the window when his own possession is complete. The girl is
freed from her captor, but only at the cost of the life and soul of the young priest: the
power of Christ merely served to anger the devil—it did not subjugate him; such would
The 70’s sexual and political revolutions were intertwined to such an extent that
While Betty Friedan opposed traditional gender codes in such works as The Feminine
Mystique, pornography was raking in the profits. The cinematic response to this was the
virtuous and chaste maidens like Jamie Lee Curtis’ character in Halloween remained
alive just long enough for the evil to be driven away by a male authority figure. Horror
films often reinforced traditional gender norms, yet the awesome evil of those films
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similar to the kind practiced under Hitler, sex became an act of passion without physical
consequences; yet horror maintained that it still had psychological and even spiritual
more than the controlling of ethnic populations that were found to be subhuman by
WASP elitists (406). The black and Catholic communities, whose uninhibited breeding
people like Margaret Sanger and “Rev. Theodore Hesburgh, C.S.C., who used
Dame from 1962 to 1965” (Jones 147). The idea of Thomas Malthus, that over-
population would ultimately destroy the earth, was marketed as the principle behind
The extremity of the situation would be explored by Alfonso Cuarón’s 2006 film
Guillermo del Toro, whose Mimic has been noted in “Good Entomologist/Bad
setting and controlling social mores (“The only solution left is the…prime totem of folk
Catholicism, the rosary”—referring, of course, to the end scene in which Mira Sorvino’s
character draws blood from her hand with a rosary crucifix to divert the attention of the
giant blood-sucking roach, which is about to eat the little boy). In Children of Men, there
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are no little boys, nor little girls—in fact, children are gone altogether (a threatening
theme that opens Del Toro’s Mimic too). The rampant sterilization of modern years is
turned into a life-threatening ideology, affecting everyone and all ethnicities. When a
woman is found, who has seemingly miraculously conceived, she is caught in the middle
of yet another struggle for control—one group wants to use her as a political poster child,
the other wants to legitimately help. Meanwhile, a war is waged in the urban cities,
character makes the ultimate sacrifice (his life) for that of the woman and her child’s, a
sense of hope in the future of mankind is restored—but the outlook is still bleak and grim
—for no one knows whether the woman and her child will really make it as they
disappear into the fog rolling across the open sea. Hope is in the approach of the ship,
but beyond that lies—what? In Children of Men, the fantasy of the “undead” is replaced
by the fantasy of the “unborn.” The reality of Malthusian sterilization taken to extremes
in modern times by social groups across the globe (birth rates are at lows nearly
everywhere), sexual liberation has once again become a pathway to political control and
upon the cultural climate of the time. Beginning with Shelley’s Frankenstein as a
representation of sexual desire and control bubbling under the surface of Victorian
prudery, gothic horror has found its way into the mainstream culture with tales of
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supernatural occurrences that are in some sense connected to the issues of the day. The
sexual revolution of the early twentieth century in New York materialized in greater force
all over America in the 60s and 70s, launching another series of gothic horror novels and
films onto audiences, from Stephen King to John Carpenter, Clive Barker, and Stanley
Kubrick. While films like The Exorcist and Children of Men get closer to the reality of
spiritual possession and widespread sterility, the human psyche of modern times
continues to want to see itself as a kind of “undead” creature, whose reason for being has
yet to be determined. Therefore, popular gothic horror icons like Frankenstein and
Dracula remain staples of modern horror fiction, representing to the populace a mirror of
its own struggles with the doctrine of Enlightenment liberation and control.
Works Cited
31 Mar 2011.
Jones, E. Michael. Libido Dominandi: Sexual Liberation and Political Control. South
Stoker, Bram. Dracula. New York, NY: W.R. Caldwell & Company, 1897. Print.
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