Comparing the presentation of Lucy and Mina in Dracula

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Lucy and Mina are the only two female characters we meet in detail in Dracula, and are also the only two characters we see becoming vampires - indeed, they are the only vampiric characters, with the exception of the chief antagonist, that are described in detail within the novel. Both characters are also narrators. Therefore it is clear that these two play a very important role in the novel.

Lucy’s part in the novel may only be relatively short, yet her role is essential to our understanding of the novel, since she is the first victim of Dracula. Lucy is also the only character whose vampiric transformation Stoker describes in detail.

It is during chapter five that Lucy’s narrative voice is heard for the first time, through her two letters to Mina, and here that we first see the key difference between Lucy and Mina in this novel: Lucy is very open about sex and sexuality, whereas Mina rarely comments on the subject at all. In only the second letter written by Lucy, she laments ‘Why can’t they let a girl marry three men, or as many as want her, and save all this trouble?’. Even though Lucy recognises that this is a somewhat heretical comment, she still makes this inner confession to her friend Mina, and whilst it appears that the two have an emotional link through their friendship, there is no point in the novel where Mina makes such a controversial comment; rather, Mina is everything that a Victorian woman could be expected to be, ‘So true, so sweet, so noble’ as Van Helsing comments. The fact that Stoker has chosen to include such and important contrast between the two major characters so early in the novel suggests that it will play an important part in the narrative. We later learn that this difference is essential to the plot, as it is only Mina’s purity and innocence that allows the group to defeat Dracula at the end of the novel, and saves Mina from Lucy’s fate.

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Despite this key difference, we see that both characters are fairly erudite Victorian women. The use of high register adjectives such as ‘exquisite’ and ‘brusque’ in their respective narratives demonstrates their relatively high intelligence, however Mina’s learning of shorthand and concentration more on the factual aspect of the various events perhaps suggests that she is of slightly higher intellect than her friend.

It is clear that Lucy is a beautiful woman, and even has three proposals from three suitors. Her relationship with each of these, even her husband Arthur, is very different from that Mina shares with Jonathan. Mina ...

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