- A member of a people inhabiting Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, and Cameroon.
- The Bantu language of the Fang.
Dictionary:
Fang (făng, fäng, fäN) ![]() |
| Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Fang |
For more information on Fang, visit Britannica.com.
| WordNet: Fang |
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
a Bantu language spoken in Cameroon
| The Vampire Book: Fangs |
Early in
Like Dracula, the three women in the castle, more recently referred to as the vampire brides also possessed the extended canines. As one of the women approached him, Harker noted not only her bad breath but felt the hard dents of the sharp teeth on his skin. He could see the moonlight illuminate the teeth of the other two women. Stoker reinforced the importance of the teeth in identifying the vampire during Dracula's attacks on Lucy Westenra As her strange illness progressed, the knowledgeable Dr. Abraham Van Helsing called attention to "the little punctures on her throat and the ragged exhausted appearance of their edges" (chapter 10). As the end approached, he noted the transformation overtaking her signaled by her teeth-her canine teeth looked longer and sharper than the rest. After her death they had grown even longer and sharper.
Dracula was not the first vampire to have fangs. In describing the first attack on Flora Bannerworth by Varney the Vampyre author James Malcolm Rymer (writing in the 1840s, a full half century before Dracula,) noted, "With a plunge he seizes her neck in his fang-like teeth-a gush of blood, and a hideous sucking noise follows." In examining Flora later, her mother brought a light close by so that " ... all saw on the side of Flora's neck a small puncture wound; or, rather two, for there was one a little distance from the other."
Laura, the victim of "Carmilla", in Sheridan Le Fanu 's 1872 tale, had a somewhat different experience. She remembered being attacked as a child and feeling two needles plunging into her chest, but upon examination, there were no visible wounds. Later in the story, Carmilla and Laura were speaking to a wandering peddler who noted that Carmilla had the "sharpest tooth-long thin, pointed, like an owl, like a needle." He offered to cut it off and file it to a dull point so that it would no longer be "the tooth of a fish." Later in a dream, Laura again had the experience of two needles piercing the skin of her neck. The doctor found a little blue spot at that place on her neck. The daughter of General SpielsdorfWhile both Varney and Dracula possessed extended canine teeth, as Martin V. Riccardo has noted, this trait was not yet a permanent feature. When Dracula was brought to the screen in Nosferatu Eine Symphonie des Garuens Graf Orlock the Dracula figure, had two teeth protruding from the front of his mouth, rather than the canines mentioned by Stoker. Then when Bela Lugosi turned Dracula into a household word through his performance in the 1931 film, he did so without any fangs. Nor did he ever have protruding teeth in any of his subsequent performances. Dracula was also portrayed by Lon Chaney, Jr. (Son of Dracula, 1943) and John Carradine (House of Frankenstein, 1944, and House of Dracula, 1945) but neither actor sported fangs.
Only in 1958, in the Hammer Films color bloodfest The Horror of Dracula did Christopher Lee turn to the camera and show audiences his extended canines. He would repeat this act in subsequent films, and after him many others would do likewise. (The fangs had appeared twice before Lee, in the 1952 Turkish version of Dracula, which did not receive broad distribution, and a 1957 Roger Corman film Blood of Dracula with a female wolflike vampire). Thus, while Lugosi (following Hamilton Deane's lead) established the image of the vampire dressed in an evening suit and cape, it was Lee who fixed the image of the fanged vampire in popular culture. Since Lee's portrayal, most (though by no means all) cinematic vampires have shown the required teeth, as did Barnabas Collins in the Dark Shadows television series late in the 1960s.
Once established, fangs became an artistic convention to call attention to the presence of vampires. Fangs commonly appeared on the cover art of vampire novels, quickly identifying those titles not possessing an obvious vampiric name. They were used in a like manner on comic book covers, Dracula dolls, and Halloween greeting cards.
A new feature introduced into recent vampire films and novels has been retractable vampire teeth. Vampires would thus appear normal when interacting with humans, and show their fangs only when about to feed. This development seems to have derived from the favorable reaction to the transformation into a werewolf shown in the Oscar-winning American Werewolf in London. Such a dramatic transformation from a normal appearance into a monsterlike figure was graphically portrayed by Grace Jones and her fellow vampires in Vamp (1986). The appearance of the extended canine teeth accompanied other changes in facial expressions and signaled the emergence of the darker predatory side of the vampire's personality.
The conventional canine fangs created a problem for the cinematic vampire. Lee's canine teeth appeared to be used more for ripping flesh than for neatly puncturing the skin and jugular vein. The two holes would be so far apart that the vampire would find it difficult to suck from both holes at the same time. Therefore, it has been common to picture the two holes as being much closer together than the distance between the canine teeth would suggest. This discrepancy, overlooked by most fans, has given feminist interpreters of vampires an opening to find something positive in the male-dominated myth. Penelope Shuttle and Peter Redgrove, for example, suggested that the wounds were not those of a carnivore, but of a viper, a snake. They suggested that the film directors, without consciously knowing what they were doing, were harking back to an ancient myth that associated the beginning of menstruation with a snake's bite. After being bitten by the snake, the girl became a woman and began menstruating; after being bitten by the vampire, the women tended to become more active and sexual. While the vampire myth has been associated with the particular anxieties of teenage males, possibly it also has something subtle to communicate directly to young females.
Riccardo, Martin V. The Lure of the Vampire. Chicago: Adams Press, 1983. 67 pp.
Shuttle, Penelope, and Peter Redgrove. The Wise Wound. New York: Richard Marek, 1978. 335 pp.
| Wikipedia: Fang |
A fang is a long, pointed tooth. In mammals, a fang is a canine tooth, used for biting and tearing flesh. In snakes, it is a poison-injecting tooth (see snake venom). Spiders also have fangs, which are part of the chelicerae. Fantasy creatures such as dragons and vampires have fangs as well.
Fangs are most common in carnivores or omnivores, but some herbivores, such as fruit bats, carry them as well. They are generally used to hold or swiftly kill prey, such as in large cats.
Omnivorous animals, such as bears, use their fangs when hunting fish or other prey, but they are not needed for consuming fruits. Apes also have fangs, which they use for threats and fighting. However, humans do not have fangs.
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The canines, or fangs, of a tiger |
The fangs of a dog |
A cheliceral fang of a tarantula (Lasiodora parahybana) |
The fangs of a Gaboon viper |
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![]() | Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | The Vampire Book. The Vampire Book. 1999 ©Visible Ink Press. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Fang". Read more |
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