Popular Culture Review Vol. 25, No. 1, Winter 2014 | Page 62

58 Popular Culture Review ideals of the upper class. Dracula’s healthy fear of religious iconography helped to keep the power of the church in place and alleviated people’s fears that he had ultimate control; in this case, God and the Church still had power over vampires through the wielding of religious artifacts (noteworthy is the fact that faith in these objects is not needed. The objects themselves hold power). As a recognizable symbol to those readers, it was accepted that Dracula represented a clear danger to humans and to the Judeo-Christian religion. For today’s readers, a vampire who represents an unknown and feared Other who will take over and conquer this world is no longer a needed, nor recognized, symbol. With globalization and increased multicultural awareness and political correctness, as well as the abolishment of the class system and government-mandated religion, these symbols of vampires are no longer necessary, nor recognizable to a twenty-first century Western audience. In fact, current Western audiences are now made up of a mix of ethnicities, particularly in North America. Explorations of ethnicity and what it means to be true to one’s roots have become important to readers. These struggles to determine “what does it mean to be me in the twenty-first century?’’ are addressed by authors such as Faith Hunter in her Jane Yellowrock series, and in the Mercy Thompson series by Patricia Briggs. Both feature Native American characters who search for what it means to hold a cultural heritage of a lost civilization. Both series feature skin-walker female protagonists who introduce Native American culture and history to the reader through their own search for what it means to grow up in this country as an ethnic minority. Characters who are blessed or cursed with new abilities also explore this idea of what it means to be paranormal in a human world. This resonates with readers who also desire to find their place in this world or to explore their cultural roots, be they Native American or otherwise. Additionally, the struggle of good against evil is still a recognizable and needed one. “...[TJhere’s an appeal post-9/11 of good triumphing in a dark and dangerous world” (Dyer 21). In this sense, where religion has also failed to comfort, paranormal characters take on this role. Like the comie book figures of the last eentury, paranormal characters have also become a symbol of human protection and social justice against unknown evils. With few remaining tangible enemies in the Western world now that the Cold War is a distant memory to many readers and the Iraq War’s fallout is winding down, aside from the