Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Gojusan-tsugi_no_uchi_(Okazaki_no_ba)_五拾三次之内_(岡崎の場)_(From_the_Fifty-three_Stations_of_the_Tokaido_Road-_Scene_at_Okazaki)_(BM_2008,3037.19408_1).jpg

A Multiculturalism of the Undead

Labeling the undead figures in non-European mythology, popular culture, and academia as “vampires” doesn’t make sense.
Page 22 of the Codex Borgia depicting naguals, shapeshifting creatures

The Teyollohcuani: Cosmopolitan Vampire Witch

When different cultures meet, their languages, foods, and songs mix and change—and so do their monsters.
The exhumation of a body believed to be a vampire

Vampires and Public Health

At the end of the nineteenth century, the people of Rhode Island were drained by a mysterious force that caused them to slowly waste away.
Poster promoting a circa-1960s theatrical reissue of the 1931 film Dracula.

Do Vampires Really Exist?

And how would we know? Let's ask the Enlightenment.