Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Vampire movies "are attempts to better define humans through one of their greatest fears: infectious disease."


 2012 Sep;43(9):363-7. doi: 10.1016/j.medmal.2013.06.014. Epub 2013 Aug 3.

Bacteria and vampirism in cinema.

Author information

  • Laboratoire de bactériologie et d'hygiène, UBM, CHU de Poitiers, BP 577, 86021 Poitiers cedex, France. Electronic address: o.castel@chu-poitiers.fr.

Abstract

vampire is a non-dead and non-alive chimerical creature, which, according to various folklores and popular superstitions, feeds on blood of the living to draw vital force. Vampires do not reproduce by copulation, but by bite. Vampirism is thus similar to a contagious disease contracted by intravascular inoculation with a suspected microbial origin. In several vampire films, two real bacteria were staged, better integrated than others in popular imagination: Yersinia pestis and Treponema pallidum. Bacillus vampiris was created for science-fiction. These films are attempts to better define humans through one of their greatest fears: infectious disease.

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