Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Final Project

I’m going to write a short story based on the concepts of love lost in Wuthering Heights and The Monk. I picked these two novels because at least one of their central themes was love and or lust. Lust being more from The Monk and love being from Wuthering Heights. Because love is more of the idea I want to go with I will use this quote from Wuthering Heights as my inspiration, “I am Heathcliff and he is me” . It embodies what I want my story to be about. That hopelessly in love feeling that overwhelms the character almost to the point of a frenzy. Love is such a powerful emotion and that it walks a fine line between insanity and true happiness.

My story will be about the ideas that are driving forces behind The Monk and Wuthtering Heights. It’s will be about unrequited love, but with a gothic twist of course. Love can be such a cruel element that can conflict and torment characters. It can drive them to madness or harm the ones they are in love with. I chose to write a short story, because writing is an interest of mine, and I would like to challenge myself to write a piece of gothic literature. I chose love as a central theme, because it, love, can be a very complicated and it can give life to a story. To keep this story more relevant to my life I will draw from personal experience. That will keep the piece more relatable and familiar to the readers. I think it’s best to try to incorporate some part of yourself in a story that way you have a central point to come back to if you lose focus.

To begin my story I will be drawing from a short short I started in a creative writing class. This short short will help me create a more elaborate story . I want to be able to write a convincing gothic story that is surprising and interesting. I also want to make sure that my inspirations, Wuthering Heights and The Monk, do not become my story. Meaning I do not want to copy their plots, obviously. That would have to be the one red flag I have with writing my own story. I want to use the novels as support, but I do not want similarities that are so obvious it just looks like I ripped off the other two novels.

Interview with the Vampire family

The American family consists of mother, father, brother and sister, figuratively speaking, and when that social norm is threatened the family is judged. The family in Interview with the Vampire consisted of two male parental figures and one female pseudo daughter . The roles of mother, father and child are interchangeable, especially between Louis and Claudia. This new type of family is gothic because of how it uncanny it is. The three of them create this grab bag of a family and it for the time they are living it is considered bizarre. If you look at the roles that Lestat, Louis and Claudia play they fill in all the spaces of the modern nuclear family.

Lestat- is the authoritative father that controls the action of the rest of the family. I would consider him the provider. He had to show Louis and Claudia how to kill and survive their vampirism. He is very controlling and with him being the only one with vampire knowledge the other two depend on him for support. He is also the one that created this family. He turned Louis and Claudia and in a weird way played mother and father.

Louis is the other father figure but he regularly fills in as the mother. From the very beginning he was the one to take care of Claudia. They shared the same coffin and he was there for her. Louis is the sensitive caring figure Claudia needs to embrace her newly acquired immortal life.

Keep them together use kid to fix the problem. Lestat found a clever way to make Louis stay with him, he turned Claudia into a vampire child. This is sort of a modern way to fix a failing relationship. A child Like a couple in trouble He used Louis’ compassion for human life and suckered him into staying.
“He was going to go away. But now he’s not. Because he wants to stay and take of you and make you happy. You’re not going are you Louis? “

You bastard! Said Louis

“Such language in front of your daughter”

“I’m not your daughter. I’m my mamma’s daughter”

“No, dear, not anymore” “You’re our daughter , Louis daughter and my daughter, do you see?

Claudia is the daughter and woman figure. As Claudia grows older and matures into a women she becomes a sort of twisted wife/companion of Louis. She fills the void of love that Louis is missing from his own family. Her appearance is a metaphor of her role. She looks like a little doll, but as the years go she becomes a woman. Claudia embodies Louis on the outside, childlike and caring, but on the inside she is a mature killer like Lestat. She almost becomes a double of Louis and Lestat.

Friday, November 20, 2009

Interview with the Vampire 2

Knowledge is defined as acquaintance with facts, truths, or principles, as from study or investigation; general erudition, but what is the value of knowledge when it becomes obsolete? I have thought of a few questions that the idea of knowledge and what its use is and how that theme shapes Interview with the Vampire.

Is there ever a point in a persons life when they know too much? What do you do with all of your acquired knowledge. You spent a lifetime getting only to die before you can effectively use it. That somehow trivializes the average human experience. Life will go on without you, you’re knowledge didn’t really impact anything and from a hundred years from nothing you have ever done will really matter. I mean reproduction and keeping the family counts for something, but even animals have been doing that longer than humans.

Knowledge is just floating out in the air , figuratively speaking, but what happens when the wrong people use it. If knowledge is considered pure why does it hurt people. Look at the atomic bomb. Someone had to think that up and someone had to think up genocide. So would it be wrong to eliminate this type of knowledge from the public or is it all fair game?

There has been a long history of who has privilege of gaining knowledge. It has been based on gender, class, and race. Women were once considered inferior to men and didn’t have any use for learning and that their time would be better spent in the kitchen and rearing the family. Then it seemed that only the rich were allowed to get an education. They had the money to pay for a private tutor and then college. Finally education and knowledge was separated by race. Segregation of black and white kids effectively kept kids in the minority down. The schools were terrible and not equal. Here we are now, if you don’t have a college education you can’t get a decent job that you can make a living off. When did knowledge become an elitist? It seems any sort of knowledge keeps you down.


The really fascinating thing about the comparison between people and vampires is the time each has to learn. Vampires may seem vastly more intelligent than normal people, but then again they have the time to learn. In fact they have forever to learn. Louis and Claudia have a thirst for knowledge that is comparable to the blood lust of Lestat. On page 99 and 100 Louis says “I’d find her tucked in the arm of my chair reading the work of Aristotle or Boethius or a new novel just come over the Atlantic.” “ She was my companion her long hours spent with me consuming faster and faster the knowledge that I gave her.” When Louis talks about knowledge he uses words like consume, and he talks about learning the way Lestat talks about feeding. Lestat is the one who doesn’t believe in the power of learning. All he knows is learn what you need to survive and forget the rest. He doesn’t see the use for anything human related.





Monday, November 16, 2009

Interview with the Vampire

When you think of vampires you think of blood thirsty (pun intend) killers that have no regard for human life. The prime example would be Bram Stokers Dracula, but Anne Rice has taken a new direction with her vampires in Interview with the Vampire. The main character, Louis, has a different view for human life.
“I had no fear regarding my own death, only a squeamishness taking my life myself. But I had a most high regard for the life of others, and a horror of death most recently developed because of my brother” (16). It must be difficult to be a vampire that is squeamish when it comes to killing. I think this is the true sign that he is not a monster, but a human coping with his immortal prison. Despite the fact he, Louis, is a vampire he shows the most human qualities. He is always struggling with life and death and the consequences of his actions towards other people. Louis is a vampire, by those rules he needs blood, preferably human blood, despite this fact he tries hard to avoid hurting people. Louis is willing to eat rats to survive, but like a human he has his faults, and he does break down and feed on a human. It is not with out remorse though. Just like a human most try to go there whole lives without hurting anyone and feel terribly when they inevitably do. Because Louis carries these feelings of guilt and remorse I do not believe he is a monster. He was just an unfortunate man that was cursed to continually hurt people, by becoming a vampire. This seems very ironic. Louis was in pain for part of his life, but instead of dying he has to go on and inflict pain on others.

Louis is very different from Claudia and Lestat. Those two characters are monsters. They thoroughly enjoy the hunt of humans and then their ultimate joy, sucking out the blood. Claudia the innocent “doll” seems to be even more vicious of a killer than Lestat, and is eager to learn the ways of being a vampire. Unlike Louis who tried hard to fight the entire process and believes himself to be evil and belonging in Hell. So it’s interesting to watch their relationship evolve, considering they have different views on life. You would think Claudia and Lestat would be closer. I think Claudia needed a human quality and Louis was able to give her that. She is just so eager to kill though, and it makes it difficult to think of her as a child or young woman. “Only kill with me tonight. You never let me see you kill, Louis!” (101). Louis kills out of necessity and it’s not a sport for him like Claudia and Lestat. These two get excited by the kill, almost like it’s a game. Claudia is just too young to understand the importance and fragileness of life. Lestat is too reckless and uncaring to understand the tragedy of death.