1David Punter.The Literature of Terror:A History of Gothic Fictions from 1765 to the Present Day.Vol.2.London and New York:Longman,1996.pp.18-19.9.20.
2Bram Stoker.Dracula(New York:Barnes and Nobles,1998)p.42.
3Anne Rice.Interview with the Vampire,New York:Ballantine Books,1976.pp.13-17;p.23.p.243.p.249.pp.8-19.p.230.p.244.p.316-317.p.286.p.239.p.262.
4Anne Rice, The Vampire Lestat,New York:Ballatine Books, 1985, pp. 474-475; p. 355; p. 107; p. 245; p. 308; p. 56; pp. 334-335; p. 383; m~. 237, 338, 355, 358.
5Clifford Geertz.The Interpretation of Cultures:Selected Essays.New York:Basic Booka.1973.pp.4-5.
6Jean Francois Lyota.The Postmodern Condition:A Report on Knowledge.trans.Geoff Bennington and Brian Massumi,Minneapolis:University of Minnesota Press,1984b.
7《创世纪》3.5.
8Marie Mulvey-Roberts, ed., The Handbook to Gothic Literature, New York: New York University Press, 1998, p. 65, p. 83, p. 9. p. 9.
9Richard Hurd, Letters on Chivalry and Romance, University of California Press, 1963, p. 61.
10David Punter, The Literature of Terror, London: Longman, 1980, p. 6.