The psychology of vampires

Author(s)

    • Cohen, David

Bibliographic Information

The psychology of vampires

David Cohen

(The psychology of everything)

Routledge, 2019

  • : hbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [127]-136)

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Why have vampires become such a feature of modern culture? Can vampire-like conditions be explained by medical research? Is there a connection between vampirism and Freud? The Psychology of Vampires presents a captivating look at the origins of vampires in myth and history, and the psychological theories which try to explain why they fascinate us. It traces the development of vampires from the first ever vampire tale, written by John Polidori in 1819, to their modern cultural legacy. Together with historical detail about Polidori's eventful life, the book also examines the characteristics of vampires, and explores how and why people might identify as vampires today. From sanguinarians who drink blood, to psychic vampires who suck the energy from those around them, The Psychology of Vampires explores the absorbing connections between vampirism and psychology, theology, medicine and culture.

Table of Contents

Aperitif - The Vampires' Favourite Ice Cream Chapter 1- Poor Polidori and the Human Jam Chapter 2 The Early History of Vampires. Chapter 3 Dracula on the couch Chapter 4 - The doctor who wanted to be something different Chapter 5 - The Vampire develops and the poet flees from the bailiffs Chapter 6 - Dip the Pen in Blood Chapter 7 - Theology, Child Abuse - and the vampire 'syndrome' Chapter 8 - The First Proper Story Chapter 9 - Sucking out energy - the passive aggressive personality Chapter 10 - In Print Chapter 11 - Vampires on the ward Chapter 12 - A modern Oedipus, Bloodletting and three more deaths Chapter 13 - Polidori's cultural legacy

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