When Polidori wrote
The Vampyre in 1819, he spawned two branches of
vampire fiction:
an aristocratic romantic hero of Gothic fiction, and the
vampire as an undead monster. But if Polidori spawned the
vampire, the most well known
vampire was created by Bram Stoker in 1897. However, before Polidori, Heinrich August Ossenfelder published the German poem
The Vampire in 1748. Even Emily Bronte's
Wuthering Heights made a reference to the
vampire when the housekeeper suspected Heathcliff of being one. Unsurprisingly to us, at least, it seems that our gorgeous blood sucking friends have long dwelled among us; a highly adaptable species, they have changed with the times and have moved into the 21
st century, barely recognizable from their original incarnations. Originally regarded as an alien nocturnal species, sleeping in coffins, living in the shadows, drinking the blood of humans in secrecy,
vampires are too easy to stereotype, but it is their variety and adaptability that makes them survivors. They may seem to be creatures living on the margins of society, but they have been central to the stories humans tell each other and these stretch back to ancient folklore. But as long as there are beliefs in the existence of
vampires, there also exist beliefs in methods of protecting ourselves against the undead. In some folk legends, for example, it was believed that eating blood bread, a bread made from
vampire blood and flour, would provide immunity against
vampire bites. And as long as people believe that the undead walk amongst us, they also believe that there are ways and means of hunting down the
vampire. In some folklore traditions, it is said that the killing of the
vampire can only be performed by
vampire hunters, priests, and monks. In the folklore of the Balkans, for example, the tales of the
vampire hunters were as much part of the Romani beliefs about the
vampire. Referred to as a
dhampir in Romani or a
vampirovic in Serbian, these folklores depict the
vampire hunters using other less well known methods to entice the
vampire to their traps. Aside from the well known methods of execution, such as staking, decapitation, crucifixes and holy water, it was also believed that
vampires can be drowned in clear flowing water. In literary fiction, the most well known
vampire hunter is Professor Van Helsing from Bram Stoker's
Dracula. But now that the undead are returning with a vengeance to walk among us again, a new generation of
vampire hunters also stalk among our midst. When thinking of a
vampire slayer, Buffy and Blade no doubt comes immediately to mind. Judging from their portrayals in
Blade,
Buffy the Vampire Slayer and
From Dusk till Dawn, the arsenal of the modern day
vampire hunter usually includes holy water, firearms with silver ammunition, silver nets, the appropriate religious symbols, crossbows that fire wooden stakes and even waterguns filled with holy water.While predominantly human, there are also other examples of
vampire hunters.
Blade, the eponymous hero of the movie and comic books, is said to be a hybrid, half human and half
vampire. In
HBO's
True Blood, we encounter a particularly vile species of the
vampire hunter in the first episode of Season 1. They are the
Rattrays. From the minute
Sookie Stackhouse lays eyes on
Vampire Bill, her curiosity is piqued. Her friend
Tara is not amused: "That's trouble, looking for a place to happen. Tall, dark....and dead". And
Tara is right. Within half-an-hour, panic ensues in the vicinity of
Merlotte's bar when there's an attempted murder and people are being beaten up.
Sookie, the feisty heroine, played by
Anna Paquin, comes to rescue
Vampire Bill from the
Rattrays,
vampire hunters who are draining his blood to sell on the black market. "Low rent backwoods trash",
Sookie hisses as she sends them running with their tails between their legs. The
Rattrays don't take too kindly to
Sookie's disruption of their draining of
Vampire Bill; inevitably, they return to seek their revenge. In
Alan Ball's hands, the
True Blood vampires are unlike the crucifix-fearing
vampires of legend and folklore. Having emerged from the coffin, with the synthetic blood
Tru Blood, designed to satisfy their thirst without having to resort to draining humans, the
vampires of
True Blood shatters the traditional mythology of the
vampire. Based on the
Southern Vampire Mysteries, the
vampires of
True Blood reveal that they have been tricking humans that the traditional
vampire mythology is true when they actually aren't at all. Now, our
vampires can pick up a case of
Tru Blood at the local Wal-Mart and pop a bottle of 'O'-positive in the microwave to satisfy their hunger. They own businesses, like our very own
Eric Northman, the 1000-year-old Viking
vampire who owns
Fangtasia; they pay taxes, they go to bars, and they are highly fashion conscious denizens of the night. There are tourists who go to
vampire bars;
'fangbangers' who lust after
vampires and long to be used by these creatures and there are the 'drainers' who hunt
vampires for their blood because of its extraordinary properties. And then there is the
Fellowship of the Sun who believes
vampires are an abomination and should be destroyed. It doesn't take a genius to see the clever socio-political themes lying just beneath the surface of
HBO's True Blood. In
Ball's hands, a new
vampire mythology emerges, particularly the energizing side effects drinking
vampire blood has on the human body.
This brings us to the question as to whether these antique
vampire killing kits, recently up for auction, are capable of harming our Louisiana
vamps. Some of these kits are incredibly well-designed and beautiful objects. Made out of rosewood or mahogany, these beautiful ornate cases come complete with the usual assortment of items designed to kill
vampires. They include silver daggers, wooden stakes, garlic powder, a syringe (for injecting a garlic solution), an ivory crucifix, metal teeth pliers, and revolvers with the requisite silver bullets. These are definitely not cheaply made plastic novelty items; they seemingly tap into our utmost primal fears and fascination about these creatures of the night. Dwight Stevens, of Stevens Auction Company, has sold four
vampire killing kits in twenty-seven years as an auctioneer, most recently in Natchez, Mississippi, for $14, 850. He states:
"I don't believe in vampires – I've never met one. But somebody believed in them, something drove people to believe [...] From New Orleans to Vicksburg, these old boxes remain".
Apparently, some of these kits date to circa 1880 Romania. Another was supposedly a Victorian kit, and was purported to have been sold at The Great Exhibition in London 1851 for $12,000. Tapping into our primal night-time terrors, these kits capture our fears of the undead originally evoked in those early folklores and legends, and there are indeed several of these kits in existence. One was seemingly made by a Professor Ernst Blomberg and was believed to be genuine. However, a man named Michael de Winter has stepped forward recently, claiming that he created these kits and made up the name of Professor Blomberg. And while hoax and urban legends seem to pile up whenever the
vampire is concerned, one does wonder if these
vampire killing kits are even capable of harming our modern Louisiana
vampires. Could they harm our quixotic, cunning 1000-year-old
Eric Northman? Or will our Viking see them off easily? And if the drainers come armed with these
vampire killing kits, is
Vampire Bill capable of protecting himself or will he again require the services of our heroine,
Sookie Stackhouse? SOURCE:
(Un)Holy Halloween, Batman, It's Antique Vampire Kits! PHOTO CREDIT: Collector's Quest via collector'squest.com
http://truebloodnet.com http://truebloodnet.com/community http://truebloodnet.com/forums
No comments:
Post a Comment