BATS, VAMPIRES, AND DRACULA
by Elizabeth Miller
Ever wonder which came first -- the bat or the vampire?
How did bats become so associated with Count Dracula that the poor maligned
creatures are forced to lurk in the recesses of twentieth-century popular
culture? Is it all the fault of that Irish writer Bram Stoker and his novel
DRACULA (1897)? Hopefully, the following paragraphs will answer these (and
other) questions.
As all bat lovers know, there is a species known as the
"vampire bat," the most common of which is "Desmodus rotundus." Found only
in Mexico and parts of Central and South America, they feed primarily on
the blood of livestock. A vampire bat will bite its prey with razor-sharp
teeth while the prey is sleeping. Rather than suck the blood, it laps it
up, much as a cat laps milk.
As for vampires (those blood-sucking monsters of fiction
and film), these have "existed" since ancient times in the folklore and
mythology of most cultures both in Europe and elsewhere. It appears that
when the blood-lapping bats were first observed by Spanish explorers in
Central and South America (their natural habitats), they were given the
label "vampire" because of the fact that, unlike all other species of bats,
these live off the blood of their prey.
Bats were associated with the mysterious and the supernatural
long before Stoker's novel appeared in print. As creatures of the night,
bats fit in well with the motifs of Gothic fiction. A bat-like vampire
appears, for example, as an illustration in the novel VARNEY THE VAMPIRE,
which appeared fifty years before DRACULA.
But it is Bram Stoker's novel that cemented the connection
between bats and the vampires of folklore. While he was working on his
novel in the 1890s, Stoker came across a clipping in a New York newspaper
concerning vampire bats which directly influenced the following comment
by Quincey Morris in DRACULA: "I have not seen anything pulled down so
quick since I was on the Pampas and had a mare ... One of those big bats
that they call 'vampires' had got at her during the night and ... there
wasn't enough blood in her to let her stand up." Stoker obviously did not
know (or chose to ignore) the fact that the vampire bat is quite small.
But Stoker's major contribution to the association of
vampires with bats was his introduction of the idea that a vampire could
shapeshift into the form of a bat (as well as a wolf and mist). For example,
in his pursuit and seduction of Lucy, Count Dracula frequently disguises
himself in the form of a large bat which flaps at her window. In Stoker's
novel such a "vampire bat" is, of course, quite capable of attacking and
draining humans.
This motif found its way into the movies. While the first
film based on DRACULA, "Nosferatu" (1922) did not use bats (here the connection
was with rats), the 1931 classic Universal Studios "Dracula" starring Bela
Lugosi certainly did. This was the movie that provided the twentieth century
with its most memorable and lasting images of Count Dracula (including
the bats), images that survive to this very day.
Even the medical community has latched on to the Dracula-bat
connection! A Venezuelan research team have isolated a previously unknown
anticoagulant glycoprotein from Desmodus rotundus (the common vampire bat).
This substance targets activated forms of blood coagulation factors, thus
inhibiting them immediately. Named "draculin," this anticoagulant agent
promises to be significant in the development of improved drugs to fight
heart disease and stroke.
Bram Stoker would certainly be amazed!
[Elizabeth Miller is Professor of English at Memorial University of Newfoundland and an internationally recognized authority on Dracula. Her book, REFLECTIONS ON DRACULA, was published in 1997. She can be reached by e-mail at emiller@plato.ucs.mun.ca]