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The Vampyre

John Polidori

The Vampyre

John Polidori

  • 27-page comprehensive Study Guide
  • Chapter-by-chapter summaries and multiple sections of expert analysis
  • Featured in our FamilyMortality & DeathLoyalty & Betrayal collections
  • The ultimate resource for assignments, engaging lessons, and lively book discussions

The Vampyre Literary Devices

Melodrama

Gothic fiction is often melodramatic, featuring larger-than-life personalities and appeals to extreme displays of emotion. The melodrama of the Gothic is part of Romanticism’s pushback against the Enlightenment and rationality. In melodrama, the characters are flat and use greatly exaggerated dialogue for emotional appeal. The goal of melodrama is to elicit emotional reactions in the audience, such as horror and sadness. Melodrama often relies on sweeping themes about human nature, such as Polidori’s theme of Good Versus Evil.

Aubrey is an inherently melodramatic hero. He is supremely naïve and views the world through romantic storybooks and poetry. His view of the world is flat and melodramatic: Ruthven is a romantic hero, while Ianthe is the epitome of nature’s beauty and innocence. In The Vampyre, melodrama substitutes high emotional appeal for character development, allowing Polidori to keep the work highly condensed and fast-paced throughout its relatively simple plot.

Foreshadowing

The tragic ending of The Vampyre is foreshadowed throughout the story. Ruthven’s attraction to virginal young women at the parties he attends is evident from the outset. When

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