Spectacle and silence: vampire tourism and the erosion of folkloric cadence in Romania and Serbia
Spectacle and silence: vampire tourism and the erosion of folkloric cadence in Romania and Serbia
Author(s): Alton ArnoldSubject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Philology
Published by: Editura Universitatii Transilvania din Brasov
Keywords: spectacle; silence; myth; memory; erosion;
Summary/Abstract: This article stands at the boundary between spectacle and silence, tracing how vampire myth erodes differently in Romania and Serbia. In Romania, ancestral beliefs once woven into ritual life have been transformed into global spectacle—Dracula branding, tourism circuits, and algorithm-driven fragments. The myth remains visible but emotionally thinned, present yet disconnected from its cultural memory. In a rural Serbian village, by contrast, the vampir and veštica persist quietly in elders’ fading recollections. Their stories are not erased by censorship but by generational drift, a slow cultural erosion. Drawing on trauma theory, cultural memory studies, and ethnography, the article asks what is preserved when myth becomes a commodity, and what is lost when it fades without fanfare. It argues that both spectacle and silence diminish folkloric cadence, though Serbia’s quiet may signal care rather than absence. The folklorist becomes a witness to fragile memory, tending stories before they disappear.
Journal: Bulletin of the Transilvania University of Braşov, Series IV: Philology & Cultural Studies
- Issue Year: 19/2026
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 189-198
- Page Count: 10
- Language: English
