Electronic Journal VirginiaTech, vol. 37, num.1 (2009)
Candence Malhiet Robillard is a doctoral student in the department of Educational Theory, Policy, and Practice at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. Her research interests include the intersection of popular culture and schooling and the ways in which students navigate successfully through both worlds. She has taught high school English for the last 13 years.
In the fall semester of 2007, I was living every
English teacher’s dream. My best students, my worst students, my serious
students, my most flighty students were absorbed, engrossed, virtually
inhaling thick, grown-up-looking books. Every day during our silent
reading time, they would turn page after page. When silent reading time
ended, I allowed five more minutes, let them linger over that last
paragraph while I waited patiently at the front of the class to begin
our day’s lesson. In one of my honors classes, I counted seven students
reading the books that had become a phenomenon. They had intriguing
titles: Twilight, New Moon, Eclipse (Meyer).
Their covers were slick, glossy invitations designed in starkly
contrasting black and white and red. One of them even featured nearly
glowing hands cradling an apple, just begging a would-be reader to take a
bite. I bit.
The Twilight Phenomenon
Twilight follows a predictable pattern. A
female protagonist, Bella, moves to a new town, Forks, Washington, to
live with her father and becomes instantly smitten with the most
handsome and most mysterious boy in her new school, Edward. The twist?
Edward and his equally beautiful siblings are vampires. When she is
alone with Edward for the first time in the sunlight, Bella sees him in
his sunlit, glittering glory. At the same time, he reveals his struggle
against the primal desire to kill her, as well as the superhuman speed
and strength that would allow him to do so. “Common sense [tells her
she] should be terrified,” but Bella finds herself “relieved to finally
understand” the cause of Edward’s mysterious, often aloof behavior
toward her (Meyer, Twilight 272).
Later in the same chapter, Bella and Edward “declare” themselves to each other (Meyer, Twilight
274), and Bella decides that she will give up her humanity to live in
Edward’s world. Forever. Surprisingly, she never wavers after making
this decision. Not only does she refuse to consider any other boy who
falls for her (and they all do), but she also withdraws from her father
and her new friends in favor of Edward’s company. Moreover, Bella
doesn’t consider the beautiful parts of being human long enough to
absorb how gruesome and dark and lonely Edward’s existence is.
In investigating the phenomenon of this novel, I
framed my reading around the following questions: what is so powerful
about this work to my students, especially the girls? What is it about
the vampire as character that is so appealing? What does this series say
to the young people who read it? Through study of editorial and reader
reviews, analysis of the novels themselves (Twilight
in particular), and research on vampire mythology and gender roles in
adolescent novels, I attempt to make sense of the love affair between my
students and these books.
As a high school English teacher who has witnessed the phenomenal success of the Twilight
novels in my own classroom and in popular media over the last several
years, I recognize how powerful these texts are. My students, like
thousands of others all over the country, love them, carry them around
for weeks at a time, read them, re-read them. Yet, I worry about their
merely absorbing the plot, images, and themes of these texts without
taking a critical look. If our students are willing to spend so much
time and energy on a novel, whether it is a novel that an adult would
have selected for them or not, then we must take their efforts
seriously. We cannot expect kids to read with an adult perspective, but
we can encourage opportunities for them to question and probe into the
characters and narratives that have become the objects of their
obsession.
Twilight can be read as a novel
with a predictable plot that reinforces passivity in young women and
aggression in young men. Bella, the quintessential damsel in distress,
is more than eager to allow Edward complete control over her safety, and
indeed, her future. On the other hand, one can read Edward as a
postmodern hero, the literary “bad boy” who reveals what it means to be
human in an ironic blurring of the boundaries between good and evil. In
this view, Twilight is the ultimate morality tale, encouraging abstinence and romance, rather than hasty lust. Either way, Twilight
complicates the genre of both the vampire narrative and adolescent
romance, offering readers a traditional love story on one level and a
fresh perspective on relationships on another.
What Readers and Critics Say
In studying the editorial reviews, I found many critics praising Twilight
as not only a vampire novel, but “a sweet and innocent love story” in
which Bella’s and Edward’s love is “as spiritual as physical although
they never have intimate relations” (Blasingame 629). In the New York Times’ review of Eclipse,
Bella is a “relentlessly intense heroine” at the center of a “steamy
occult romantic thriller” (Schillinger, para. 2, 11). While the tone of
the article is generally ironic, remarking in conversational prose the
juxtaposition of the dangerous supernatural world and the superficiality
of high school drama, it, like most editorial reviews, ignores the
lingering philosophical issues surrounding Bella’s willingness to give
up her humanity for an existence as an outlaw and outcast.
Editorial reviewers see this novel as a suspenseful,
action-packed page-turner that is sure to capture the attention of
readers of all ages. The problem here, though, is that the readers who
are the target audience of this book are teenagers—specifically teenage
girls. Some reviewers acknowledge the pervasive sensual imagery in the
novel, particularly the way that readers are expected to respond to the
characters’ “palpable” love “viscerally” (Booklist
58). However, in these professional reviews, the most disturbing
aspects of Edward’s character are described even as they are tempered
with gushing praise for the love story between the two characters. Publisher’s Weekly
asserts that “the sense of danger inherent in [Bella’s and Edward’s]
love, and Edward’s inner struggle [are] the perfect metaphor for the
sexual tension that accompanies adolescence” (207). That kind of
description would grab the attention of many adolescent readers, even if
that love story involves a nearly one-hundred-year-old vampire, a
teenage girl, and a relationship based on physical attraction that
borders on abuse.
Absent from any reviews of this novel are excerpts
from the text that provide vivid descriptions of characters’ moods and
emotions that are particularly disturbing, not to mention particularly
revealing. Early in Twilight Edward asserts his
protective power over Bella against her will. In one scene, Bella falls
faint at the sight of blood in biology class (insert ironic chuckle
here), and Edward insists he drive her home. In Meyer’s prose, Edward is
described in superlatives. In this instance, he is “outraged,”
“indignant,” and “threatening,” “gripping a fistful of [Bella’s] jacket”
and “yanking” her toward him (Meyer, Twilight
104-105). Bella, as the first-person narrator, describes herself
“staggering,” being “ignored,” and “finally freed” once she relents to
Edward’s demands (Meyer, Twilight 105). To me,
this does not seem like the beginnings of a romantic love affair.
Rather, Edward and Bella’s mutual magnetic attraction is based on
physical appearance and proximity. When he is near, Bella can only
concentrate on his beauty. He, likewise, finds her equally mysterious
and fascinating, since she seems immune to his mind-reading powers.
For many readers, this is enough. Edward is so
beautiful, so mysterious, so deliciously unattainable that his age
(almost 80) and his dietary needs (the blood of living creatures) only
makes him that much more appealing to readers. And Bella, who already
feels isolated and different from her cellphone-using, prom-attending
peers, would of course be attracted to an equally aloof boy. Perhaps
readers long for the freedom Bella enjoys once she falls in love with
Edward. With him, Bella believes she has found her true love and can
choose her own path, independent of her parents, her friends, and even
her species, but the price she pays for it is a willingness to
participate at least to some extent in a traditional version of
gender-separated power roles: from the very beginning of their
relationship, it is clear that Edward is in control, both physically and
emotionally.
Additionally, this novel expects that the reader will
accept that the kind of power and passion that emanates from Edward’s
and Bella’s relationship is the only logical progression of their
relationship. Still, there is something beautiful about a creature who
defies his very nature to remain devoted to a very human relationship.
From the Cullens’ choice to remain “vegetarian” (they kill animals only)
to Edward’s continuing sacrifices to cater to Bella’s needs, the
vampires in this novel seem even more human than their actual human
counterparts. Edward chooses how he will be—he forges his own path in the absence of any kind of strict morality or adherence to religious dogma.
What’s Wrong with a Little Obsession?
Obviously, a guy like Edward can only exist in a dream world, but
what does this kind of prevailing dream world reveal about young women
in the twenty-first century? In one way, Bella is clumsy, goofy, and
incomplete until she meets Edward. In that regard, she is a reincarnate
from the protagonists in 1950s novels who primped for twenty pages just
to attend a dance with the object of their affection. On the other hand,
though, Edward is no ordinary boy (he’s no ordinary monster, either),
and Bella represents a uniquely modern young woman. She arrives in Forks
already isolated from humanity. School is irrelevant; she has already
learned every lesson presented in the school episodes. Her parents are
grossly inadequate; Bella has come to Forks so that her mother can
follow her new husband to baseball training camp, and her father can
barely cook himself a meal or wash his own laundry.
Even though many women in my generation were raised in
the wake of first-wave feminism in which girls are not relegated to the
home and are encouraged to pursue careers and interests independently,
plots centering around girls who dream about boys asking them on dates,
reciprocating their affection, and eventually living happily ever after
are so pervasive in popular narrative that many don’t recognize the
stereotypes they represent. In discussing Twilight
with some of my female students, I found that many saw nothing
surprising or questionable about Bella’s and Edward’s relationship. It
seemed normal to them that a girl would alter almost every area of her
life for a boyfriend. Once we began discussing Bella’s complete
willingness to succumb to Edward’s every mood, some actually did see
parallels between this novel and the traditional, predictable romantic
plots in other books they have read, and they began to notice (if not
yet to question) the use of such a paradigm in literature intended for
young women. However, because Edward and Bella’s relationship is the
stuff of fantasy, not real life, their characters provide opportunity
for more than literal interpretation. Encouraging students to situate a
novel like Twilight within the genres of both
young adult literature and vampire tales as a whole can lead to deeper
reflection and richer discussion that examines significant symbolism and
metaphoric meaning. In other words, this isn’t just an entertaining
read.
The Lure of the Vampire—Then and Now
Vampire narratives intended for young adults reveal issues of
humanity, most often sexuality and identity, that mirror some of the
problems young adults grapple with today. In Not Your Mother’s Vampire: Vampires in Young Adult Fiction,
Overstreet categorizes notable patterns in vampire fiction, including
stories on becoming a vampire, romances with vampires, and the humans
involved with vampires.
Overstreet sees Anne Rice’s Lestat novels, beginning with Interview with a Vampire,
as pivotal in the rethinking of the vampire character in popular
fiction. These characters are seductive and human, so much so that “far
from being repulsed by or afraid of creatures that would previously have
been considered monsters, we are drawn to them and may even want to
become them” (7). In chronicling the myriad examples of vampire novels,
ranging from serious to silly, Overstreet acknowledges that vampires,
especially the attractive ones inspired by Anne Rice, may in fact
represent “everything that most teenagers are not, but might like to
be—fearless, attractive, powerful, cool, independent, unsupervised, and
intelligent” (13). Clearly combining good looks, rebellious power, and
elusive sexuality can be a path to success in reaching a young adult
audience. Vampires are characters who have transcended time and death
and who continue an existence in which their every choice is their own
(Overstreet). They live outside the boundaries of society and are able
to construct their own rules and morality, in the tradition of the dark
Byronic hero. Many contemporary vampire characters choose compassion,
mercy, and love, even in the face of their unquestionable power over the
humans around them. They may be hundreds of years old, yet they are
modern men who often protect those human characters who are good to
them. Twilight’s Edward is one such Byronic vampire hero.
They Did What?!
Love and Sex in the Vampire World
At first, there is a chance that Bella and Edward’s relationship
doesn’t have to be sexual. It is nice to read about Edward’s restraint,
and we can feel how painful it is for him to leave Bella in New Moon;
he may be determined not to harm her, but he can’t protect her from
other vampires (even his own “family”) or the various dangers associated
with his way of life. In this manner, the “Twilight
series so resonates with girls because it perfectly encapsulates the
giddiness and the rapture—and the menace—that inherently accompany
romance and sex for them” (Flanagan, para. 16). At first, their
relationship is about falling in love and almost innocent sensual
exploration. Even holding hands is almost too much, and their first kiss
is nearly explosive.
In book four, Breaking Dawn,
Bella and Edward marry and physically consummate their relationship.
Although Edward’s desire doesn’t kill Bella, and although much of the
action happens between the lines, the effects of their sexual encounter
are obvious. The room is destroyed, and Bella looks as though she has
been beaten black and blue. This is more than just a loss of virginity;
it is primal, physical sex that finally occurs after “one thousand pages
of foreplay” (Flanagan, para. 15). As Breaking Dawn
progresses, Bella becomes pregnant, and in a gory, vivid birth scene,
she delivers a vampire baby while simultaneously “dying,” therefore
creating an “acceptable” reason for Edward to change her into a vampire.
From that point on, the existence of the vampire becomes the “normal”
one in the novel. This seems like a perfect place for a happy ending,
but even Bella’s new immortality does not resolve all the conflict
presented within this novel.
What do these books say to young women and young men
who read them? On one hand, Bella’s life literally ends when she marries
Edward, but ironically, that choice is also her ultimate happiness. She
realizes her full potential as a character only when she becomes a
vampire; her human awkwardness and introversion morph into superpowers
in Edward’s world. Long before she ever becomes a vampire herself,
though, Bella rejects humanity, rushing headlong into marriage with
Edward. At his insistence, Bella does wait until she graduates high
school and turns 18, but she does so with impatience. She doesn’t want
to age any further before becoming immortal, as Edward’s body is frozen
at 17.
Bella’s Other Options?
Not only does Bella choose Edward and eternal youth near the
beginning of the series, but her character’s choice is never really
complicated by any other options. The other human characters are
unsuitable substitutes for Edward, although they would make most
adolescent female protagonists more than adequate boyfriends. These are
characters that go to class, ask girls on dates, and hold after-school
jobs, characters whose descriptions and actions evoke old-fashioned
mores and an idealized time in American life (Flanagan).
As New Moon opens, Edward,
afraid for Bella because of the very real dangers inherent in being a
human among vampires (most especially the dreaded Volturi, a vampiric
“royal family” who are at once fascinated by and threatened by Edward’s
family), seeks to protect her by leaving her. In the aftermath, Bella’s
friendship with Jacob, a Native American from the Quileute tribe,
intensifies. As Bella pines for the missing Edward, she refuses to let
herself fall in love with Jacob, but Meyer doesn’t allow her heroine any
chance to sort through a real love triangle. Instead, Jacob’s role
becomes more complicated by the revelation that he and some of his
Quileute peers can morph back and forth into werewolves at will, no full
moon necessary.
Is there any hope for young men whose friends,
sisters, girlfriends read these novels? The young human men who become
infatuated with Bella, like Mike and Tyler, are likeable, attractive
boys with a balance of coolness and awkwardness that most any teenage
girl would find adorable. Instead, Bella must choose between two
monsters. Though there is potential at this stage for “the characters
[to] grow too big for the box they’ve been placed in, where they become
bold and try to deal with their issues,” this never happens (Trimboli).
There is no moment in any of the four Twilight novels in which “Edward .
. . fail[s] at something and discover[s] humility” (Trimboli). Edward
barely has to fight Jacob for Bella’s affection, and even though Edward
and Jacob, as members of enemy monster species, are sworn enemies, even
this complication doesn’t really pose much of a conflict to Bella.
Bella as a New Woman
By the end of Breaking Dawn, in a deus ex machina
rivaling those of the best Greek tragedies, Jacob’s role in Bella’s
life is secured. Members of the werewolf pack frequently “imprint” on a
member of the opposite sex. This person is essentially the werewolf’s
“soul mate” and one true love. The Quileute men/werewolves remain
faithful to the one on whom they have imprinted, devoting themselves to
an eternity of love and protection. Jacob has involuntarily imprinted on
Renesme, Bella and Edward’s child. The happy ending that Bella finds at
the end of Breaking Dawn is complex—oddly
postmodern yet optimistic, while simultaneously reinforcing traditional
gender and social roles. It may not be the ending that readers could or
would literally choose, and Bella’s choice to follow Edward into his
world may not be the ideal choice or the only choice for her character,
but it is one that allows this narrative some kind of peaceful closure.
The boundaries between good and evil are not totally erased, but they
stretch far beyond the human and supernatural communities of Forks.
In the human world, Bella is faced with dichotomies.
She, like many young women I teach, feels the pull to choose education
and career or raising a family. She can stay in Forks or she can go to college. She must choose Edward or
Jacob. Becoming a vampire, though, releases these dichotomies and
expands her choices infinitely. Because Jacob has imprinted on Renesme,
he will be a friend in her life forever. Her father has accepted her
choice, though under a thinly disguised sham of ignorance. And let’s
face it, as a member of the practically immortal un-dead, Bella can
attend college dozens of times.
If we view Bella in this manner, then maybe her
choice, her taking control of her own future, is the compelling
component to this series. It’s not hard to imagine, by the end of the
series, that perhaps Bella has fallen in love so quickly with Edward
because he is the gateway to her destiny. She certainly is a better
vampire than human, even disguising the painful initiation process in
order to spare Edward and his family the distress of watching her
suffer. Once transformed, she becomes the most powerful new vampire any
of the Cullen family has ever seen. Watching Bella fall in love with the
irresistibly beautiful Edward and convincing him to give her the one
thing she decides she wants puts a strong female character at the center
of two worlds and makes for a powerful reading experience. In this
reading, she is innocent and seductive, naïve and clever: a biblical Eve
tempting her own fate and Edward’s strict morality. No wonder many are
insanely jealous of Bella. Not only does she snare the coolest guy in
town, but she does so on her own terms. Now that is a powerful story
worthy of a popular culture phenomenon.
Concluding and Continuing
As a comment on contemporary society, “one of the unintended lessons of Twilight
is that America has gotten so moribund that it’s the undead who come
through in the clutch while the living go through their daily paces
oblivious” (Wolcott 329). Certainly one interpretation of the novel is
that in order to find acceptance and an escape from shallow materialism,
one must look outside of society and indeed humanity itself.
On the other hand, from a literal perspective, maybe
we are on the brink of a major shift in what teenagers expect from their
literary counterparts. Though Twilight is filled
with brooding existentialists, a relatively uncomplicated plot
structure, and creepy imagery, it is certainly a departure from much of
the other contemporary young adult literature that is currently being
marketed to young women (Glenn). Rather than extol the virtues of
materialism, alcoholism, and tawdry, pervasive sex, Twilight
is ultimately about sacrifice. Bella sacrifices her humanity for a
“life” that will give her room to define her own identity and realize
her own potential. Edward sacrifices his own instincts for a grueling
three novels before he can share eternity with his true love. For many
young women, there is something powerful in such a romantic narrative,
and there is something powerful in this series that young readers have
embraced and are showing little signs of abandoning.
If we look beyond the mass-market selling of
materialism disguised as literature that we find in many young adult
texts, we may see the beginnings of a subtle shift in the messages and
possibilities offered to young people through books. If so, then it is
important to encourage students to read this text critically, to explore
it in the context of other popular media, and consider its implications
beyond entertainment. It is possible that this novel allows for a
questioning of assumptions and an expansion of our current understanding
of love, young men, young women, and the ways in which we craft stories
about them.
References
Blasingame, James. “Books for Adolescents” [Twilight review]. Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy 49,(2006): 628–633. Print.
Flanagan, Caitlin. “What Girls Want.” The Atlantic Online. 2008. Web. 3 Dec. 2008. www.theatlantic.com/doc/print/200812/twitlight-vampires.
Glenn, Wendy. “Gossiping Girls,
Insider Boys, A-List Achievement: Examining and Exposing Young Adult
Novels Consumed by Conspicuous Consumption.” Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy 52:1 (2008): 34–42. Print.
Meyer, Stephenie. Breaking Dawn. New York: Little, Brown, and Company, 2008. Print.
———. Eclipse. New York: Little, Brown, and Company, 2007. Print.
———. New Moon. New York: Little, Brown, and Company, 2006. Print.
———. Twilight. New York: Little, Brown, and Company, 2005. Print.
Overstreet, Deborah Wilson. Not Your Mother’s Vampire: Vampires in Young Adult Fiction. Lanham, MD: The Scarecrow Press, 2006. Print.
Rev of Twilight, by Stephenie Meyer. Publisher’s Weekly 18 July 2005: 207. Print.
Rev of Twilight, by Stephenie Meyer. Booklist 15 November 2005: 58. Print.
Rice, Anne. Interview with a Vampire. New York: Random House.
Schillinger, Liesl. Rev. of Eclipse, by Stephenie Meyer. New York Times 12 Aug. 2007, electronic ed.: PAGE?. Print.
Trimboli, Wendy. L. “Aromatic
Airhead Meets Vacuous Vampire.” Message 5 posted to
http://www.amazon.com/review/product. 19 Aug. 2008. Web posting.
Wolcott, James. “The Twilight Zone.” Vanity Fair Dec. 2008: 290+. Print.
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