For this
week I read Interview with the Vampire. The most interesting relationship I
observed in this story is the relationship between Louis and Lestat. There are
many things I want to address but the first is that this relationship is
between two males. For the time this sort of intimate relationship between two
people of the same sex was not as accepted as it is today. More
importantly this relationship as portrayed throughout the narrative is done so
with such a masterful attention to lifelike nuances that one might actually
believe in the feelings being represented. From the night that Louis is turned
by Lestat, during which he describes a certain euphoria found in intimacy, to
their more bitter end we see a full range of emotions. One of the most
important features I noticed is that although sometimes there current state is
one of apathy we do see a certain bond that cannot be broken, which in the
story is represented by the maker and made relationship, but which we do see in
real relationships. At one point we even see Louis attempt to take the life of
Lestat without remorse. Another extremely important relationship is between
that of the two elder vampires and Claudia. They serve as a sort of parental
unit, which one might notice still solidifies even more the sort of union
between Louis and Lestat, and at the same time are the cause of her death.
Louis suffers from this in a bizarre manner. He feels remorse for turning her
but at the same time he is close enough to care about her because he turned
her. After which we see to his horror Claudia showing an attitude of little
care towards killing while he himself does so with regret, even though he won’t
even kill humans. That is also something else to notice. Louis refuses to feed
off humans, which is uncharacteristic for a vampire. Then again this book shows
a very wide array of vampires from Louis the regretful, to Lestat the cruel and
cunning, and even to the mindless corpses of Eastern Europe. What I find so
interesting out of all of this is that the different types of vampires are not
simply classified but defined by their actions and attitudes, making them
completely fluid characters with as much if not more humanity than most humans
themselves.
No comments:
Post a Comment