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Love Bites: What Sexy Vampires Tell Us About Our Culture

By Sarah Seltzer , RH Reality Check. Posted November 28, 2008.


Pop culture vampires have always reflected cultural anxieties about sex. "Twilight", the new teen box office blockbuster, is no exception.
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Teen vampire flick and pop-culture juggernaut "Twilight", like "Mama Mia!" and "Sex and the City" before it, shattered records this weekend and made female moviegoers hard to ignore. 

"Twilight" is far from a feminist triumph, though: it's been interpreted by more writers than this one as a purity allegory perfectly tailored for a (hopefully fading) era of abstinence-hype and hand-wringing about "hook-up culture." With a heroine who yearns to both be ravished and bitten, and a hero loath to rob her of either soul or virginity, the "Twilight" plot arc sells a pseudo-empowering fantasy (men as the sexual and moral gatekeepers, leaving women free to express their desires) while wholeheartedly embracing patriarchal norms. 

The film somewhat mitigates the book's rabid antifeminist message, providing more room to chuckle at the smoldering pouts of its young protagonists (whether that campiness was intended is unclear) and downplaying the extent to which human Bella's singular fixation with vampire hunk Edward precludes everything else. But the basic storyline of "I won't bite you, it's for your own good" can't be changed. It's the core of the tale. 

Putting a Stake in Victorian Mores

This not the first time vampires in pop culture have been a perfect expression of the currents and anxieties of their time. In fact, one might argue that that is their purpose.  

With immortality, a killer instinct, and a life on the fringes, Vampires are a perfect conduit for musings on the human condition.  "Vampires have long served to remind us of the parts of our own psyches that seduce us," writes Salon's Laura Miller (in a superb analysis of the "Twilight" books). But the metaphor is often less existential than that, as the vampire bite is easy shorthand for sex. Vampirism allows consumers to take vicarious pleasure in rule-breaking couplings, while also justifying phobias about sex-because the seducers do have lethal fangs, and their condition is quite contagious. 

Bram Stoker's Dracula, the most prominent sire of today's fictive undead, was a repository of post-Victorian fears: syphilis and shifting gender roles. Thus the book is full of bizarre sexualized imagery that equates gender-bending with evil. Hero Jonathan gets attacked and nearly bitten by a gang of wanton vampiresses. Lucy, an ill-fated flirt, juggles three suitors; by story's end all three of them must stake the undead Lucy in a scene that critics compare to a gang rape. Mina, the less transgressive woman in the story, is forced to drink blood from a wound in Dracula's chest, a reverse-breastfeeding image that emphasizes the feminine qualities of the Count.  

The entire book feels like a last gasp of Victorian purity -- as well as an anticipation of the sexual revolution that was around the corner. It's probably no coincidence that the first film version of "Dracula" was a huge hit just as the Depression ushered out the Jazz Age and its socio-sexual upheaval.

Vampires in the Modern Era 

Indeed, pop culture vampires have always adapted to rapidly shifting sexual politics. A film remake of "Dracula" in the late 1970s (starring Frank Langella) gave the Count a real romance with Lucy, no longer a doomed Edwardian flirt but instead an independent woman. In her history of vampires, Nina Auerbach describes this new Lucy as "everything a feminist vampire should be. Her romance with Frank Langella could be one of the swoonier inserts in Ms. Magazine. He loves her strength and self-assertion ... " 


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See more stories tagged with: culture, gender, sexuality, vampires, twilight

Sarah Seltzer is an RH Reality Check staff writer and resident pop culture expert. Sarah is a freelance writer based in New York City. Her work has been published in Bitch, Venus Zine, Womens eNews, and Publishers Weekly among other places. She formerly taught English in a Bronx public school.


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re: buffy vs. bella
Posted by: nonaj on Nov 28, 2008 6:18 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm a huge Joss Whedon/Buffy fan, a Twilight semi-fan(the books are fun reads but the writing is lack at times), and self identified feminist.

And yet I can't stand when Buffy and Bella are somehow compared in terms of feminist standards. Buffy was not that humanized of a character--in her world, she is as strong as vampires, she always has a clever comeback(thanks to Joss by the way), and she barely messes up her hair half the time. It's almost cartoon like in some respects.

Bella is cartoon like in some ways, and yet she's much more grounded in reality than Buffy's character ever was. She is smart and clever, but somehow that doesn't translate with what actually comes out of her mouth a lot. She is a little spastic, and doesn't know her way around tae kwon do or a stake.

But honestly, which character is more like your average 17 year old? Bella, obviously. 17 is usually about being awkward in many ways. Vampires in the Twilight world are MUCH more dangerous than in Buffy's world. Sure, her vampy bf is overprotective--but not cause she's a broad. Because she's human. Do you see him treating his vampire sisters similarly? Heck no, they basically hand the guy his nads on a silver platter left and right through the series.

And as for patriarchal norms--I have to disagree. You are coming at this from a feminist perspective. The author, however is coming from this from a religious perspective--and not a molly mormon one at that. It's no secret she is a fan of progressive Christian theologist Walter Wink, who explains that the world offers only two ways to fight evil: fight or flight. Wink argues that Christ offered a "third way"--to confront evil but not on evil's terms. But with love--and not just whimisical kumbaya love. Proactive love where you stand up for what is right and good, even when it's hard to.

If you look at the Twilight series from that perspective, you can better see what she was doing here, and it's not in terms of maintaining the patriarchal status quo. The vampire dynasty the Volturi is actually the emodiment of patriarchal dominance, while the Cullen family embodies Christ's ideals of agency and liberty and governing through counsel(the Cullens make decisions in the form of counsel with everyone having equal say).

Now by the end of the series, Bella takes on the Volturi old boys network head on with the "third way." Not with tae kwon do and stakes, but by using her protective powers to protect all those she loves and cares for. She refuses to fight or engage them offensively, which ends the standoff in a stalemate.

Bella is NOT a postergirl for patriarchal order--she's a postergirl for post-patriarchal power structures in fact.

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» RE: re: buffy vs. bella Posted by: EKSwitaj
» RE: re: buffy vs. bella Posted by: badkitty68
» RE: re: buffy vs. bella Posted by: ranchero42
» RE: re: buffy vs. bella Posted by: Shey
» RE: re: buffy vs. bella Posted by: aonghus36
Buffy = feminist complexity, Twilight = patriarchal propaganda
Posted by: Shey on Nov 29, 2008 4:09 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hopefully, the teen girls who are swooning over this ode to traditional "girl in peril/boyfriend always knows best" tripe, will get over it and move on.
There will never be another Buffy, but HBO's True Blood is an excellent adult show for those of us who love the genre. (Buffy was also as much for adults as for teens, as the still undead cult following attests to).

If I had a seventeen year old daughter, I'd rather have her exposed to the graphic sex and violence of True Blood (as if it's anything teens haven't seen before) along with the strong, independent young women on the show, than to the insipid anti-feminist message of Twilight.

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Buffy v. Bella
Posted by: dudelette on Nov 29, 2008 4:27 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I haven't read the Twilight books. Too old, I guess. I understand the whole teen desire (I may be old but I do remember how it felt), especially the need to have the object of desire be special in some way.

But the difference I see, and not just from a feminist standpoint, is that it sounds like Bella lets life happen to her, instead of taking charge of it.

Buffy didn't choose to be special; she was forced into the position of protecting humanity. Any person who has not had a life growing up of two parents who stayed married and happy, never had employment/money problems, or health problems, and were able to plan college and a future without worries will probsbly not identify with Buffy. But the rest of us, with divorced parents, financial limitations, adult responsibilities pushed onto us as children, and so on, do identify with Buffy. And we are the majority.

The Twilight author's Mormonism and it's typical life of being a stay at home mom with children infuses her writing. Bella ultimately becomes a stay at home mom, albeit a vampire one, and it is treated as the best thing she could do with her life. There's certainly nothing wrong with it, but it seems a limitation and tunnel vision. Most women in this country have outside jobs. It's not by choice. Recognizing that a white knight or sexy vampire is not going to save or protect you from the world, that you are ultimately the only person you can count on, is something these female fans of the series must accept.

Many adult women swoon over the supernatural romances that have become so popular. They love that idea that a special man, in these books a vampire or werewolf, usually, would love them so much that they would take them in and keep them with them forever, protecting and supporting them, wanting only their love in return. It's a lovely fantasy, but it's a fantasy.

Enjoy the books, but remember the truth: there are many more Buffys in this world than Bellas.

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» RE: Buffy v. Bella Posted by: badkitty68
» RE: Buffy v. Bella Posted by: Shey
» RE: Buffy v. Bella Posted by: badkitty68
» RE: Buffy v. Bella Posted by: bornxeyed
» RE: Buffy v. Bella Posted by: Shey
» RE: Buffy v. Bella Posted by: bornxeyed
» RE: Buffy v. Bella Posted by: Shey
» RE: Buffy v. Bella Posted by: bornxeyed
» RE: Buffy v. Bella Posted by: Shey
» RE: Buffy v. Bella Posted by: bornxeyed
» RE: Buffy v. Bella Posted by: Shey
» RE: Buffy v. Bella Posted by: bornxeyed
» RE: Buffy v. Bella Posted by: bornxeyed
» RE: Buffy v. Bella Posted by: Shey
» RE: Buffy v. Bella Posted by: bornxeyed
Ya' say you want a revolution...
Posted by: jimidee on Nov 29, 2008 6:10 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"The entire book feels like a last gasp of Victorian purity -- as well as an anticipation of the sexual revolution that was around the corner."

We had this revolution back in the late 60's and early 70's and all I got out of it was this lousy tie-died t-shirt...and oh yeah, the real viruses Hep C and herpes. My body soundly defeated the Hep C (although I still test pos for the antibodies) but the herpes is the gift that keeps on giving...just get really upset and herp comes knocking.

And she didn't even have fangs...

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Selzer got dracula wrong
Posted by: dlaserman on Nov 29, 2008 6:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sarah Selzer should re-read Dracula as she apparently was not paying attention, or perhaps she only knows the book through movies and other feminist studies that also err on the side of politicizing the work over actually analyzing it. The claim that patriarchal notions of purity are held up in the novel is ludicrous. Dracula is an energizing force to Stoker's dying Victorian culture, in need of an infusion from the outside (both America and Transylvania as it turns out) to set things right. It's not the simplistic cultural tripe of Twilight - as much as many attempt to reduce it to such levels believe.

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True Blood makes Twilight look like Dora the Explorer
Posted by: Dankhank on Nov 29, 2008 8:05 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
True Blood energizes the decadent Bayou much the same as Victorian society energized.

True Blood has been running for months ... WTF is Twilight? Oh, yea, a kids fairy tale ...

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My wife devoured the series over the course of about six days.
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Nov 29, 2008 9:22 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
She very much enjoyed reading it, and I'm taking her to the matinée to see the movie later this afternoon.

Seems like it entertains her. I'll leave the judgment over its so-called message to the critical puritans of the boggersfear.

Seriously, somebody needs to go and interview Pop Culture and find out why so many think he controls their destiny.

I just hope the movie doesn't bite. Ten bucks is a lot of money to spend on drama with teeth when Friday the 13th Part the Eleventieth is showing down the hall or sometime soon.

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» Follow up: Yes, it was a yawner. Posted by: ABetterFuture
» And, btw... Posted by: ABetterFuture
» RE: And, btw... Posted by: Spot
Don't Forget "Dark Shadows"
Posted by: rainingwolf on Nov 29, 2008 9:26 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The author leaves out one important element in her influence of vampires in modern culture. The 1960's tv series of Dark Shadows was the first to infuse the vampire with a conscience and a sense of agony over hurting victims. Barnabas Collins wanted desperately not to hurt women and to search for a way out of his curse. Some of the women, like Victoria Winters, lacked a strong female backbone, but others, like Dr Julia Hoffman were able to stand up to him and defy him. I believe this was the first time the vampire was approached from two perspectives; the vampire himself was given a conscience, and the women were portrayed as compassionate yet strong. Perhaps that's why 40 years later Dark Shadows still sells well and commands conventions celebrating its existence.

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» RE: Don't Forget "Dark Shadows" Posted by: kahuna_2bears
While I see the points the author is trying to make,
Posted by: annavan1 on Nov 29, 2008 10:20 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't necessarily agree. There's more than one lens with which to look at fiction. As a huge fan of vampire stories, I've observed that there are significant differences in the themes, and characteristics of vampires across the genre.
Is it possible that Bella is just a person, a character who represents one of many different personality types out there, whether male or female? How many teen girls have you ever seen that have the assertiveness, smarts, and self-actualization to navigate the complexities of new-found lust, attraction, relationships, and life? Or teen boys, for that matter?
I think that looking at the personality and actions of a character who happens to be female, and assuming that the author was making a statement about females in general, could be somewhat simplistic. Yes, Bella bumbles around, lost and confused - welcome to the teenage years!
As far as Twilight goes, part of its appeal is that the character of Edward comes across as very protective and loving. He resists biting her because he doesn't want her to become a being like himself. He knows what that entails, she doesn't. And even as he's drawn to her on several levels, he's fighting his own instincts to destroy the one he loves. It creates the tension and suspense in the story, which keeps the reader turning the page. Any decent work of fiction does that.
Additionally, I think that for many women, male protectiveness - when it's not part of a pattern of controlling behaviors - feels like love and concern. In a culture where casual "hook-ups" are the norm, teens and adults alike crave a very deep, intense connection to a person that loves them without reservation.
And let's face it, a big part of the movie's appeal is that the young stars are gorgeous and appealing. If Edward looked like Nosferatu, would teen girls be lining up to see the movie? Not so much.

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Relax, people.
Posted by: Pissed Off Woman on Nov 29, 2008 10:34 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Trust me on this one: ANYTHING featuring a sexy vampire guy is like catnip to teenage girls. It was true of Anne Rice's Vampire Lestat, especially after the Queen of the Damned movie came out. It was true of Buffy and her spin-offs. It was probably true of the Dracula movies as well, especially Frank Langella's, although I can't speak with authority on this one since it's before my time.

Vampires have supernatural powers, and are therefore dangerous and cool. They can give you those powers by making you into a vampire. Plus they bite you on the neck. How can that not be sexy?

And remember that current vampire pop culture is not limited to "Twillight"--there's also the Anne Rice novels, True Blood, Laurell K. Hamilton and Christine Feehan's supernatural adventure/romance novel, and countless other lesser-known vampire sex romps.

I don't think girls who watch "Twillight" give a rat's ass about whether it is feminist or not. They are the same girls who obsessed over Anne Rice's Lestat, who has nothing in common with "Twillight"'s Edward other than that he's a sexy vampire. They want their porn, it's as simple as that.

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RE: omanticizing the predator by the prey.
Posted by: Joni50 on Nov 29, 2008 9:59 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Monster stories reflect the shadow side, that is, aspects of human nature that we don't want to own up to. In reading this discussion my mind kept straying back to monsters of other, non-western cultures. Their monsters are different from ours because their cultures are different; yet, we can understand monster stories from other cultures because the shadow side of human nature, embodied by these monsters, is universal.

There was a monster story I heard a while back that really stuck in my mind. It's from the Chippewa, and tells of a monster, a creature of famine and excess, whose name starts with a W and ends with an o. Even though I am, by day, a rational person who makes a living teaching mathematics... right now it's dark outside, and an instinctual respect for the shadow side prevents me from mentioning the name of the monster, because, as the storyteller says, "I don't know who will hear this tale, or at what time of the day or night he will hear it."

Meanwhile, on the other side of the pond, the monsters of Grimm's fairy tales stand in for the anxieties of civilization as experienced by children who are struggling to become civilized. These monsters have lost some of their bite through familiarity, but a careful re-reading of these tales can bring on a primordal shudder.

Although the cultural milleaus of these stories may seem quaint and/or exotic, we all understand these stories perfectly well, becuase we have all met these monsters personally. As Pogo said, they is us.

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Vampire as a metaphor
Posted by: blackspotnews on Nov 29, 2008 12:57 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Comparing vampires as sexual metaphors is certainly interesting.

I'd take it a step further and say that the vampires depicted in twilight were metaphors for sexual ADDICTION, and almost helpless, powerless lack of control in face of their own basic urges.

Deepak Chopra tells us that addicts are inherently seekers of joy, though misguided, these people live in search of something divine, a profound sense of ecstasy.

Vampires are spiritual creatures.

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» RE: Vampire as a metaphor Posted by: bornxeyed
» RE: Vampire as a metaphor Posted by: Joni50
» RE: Vampire as a metaphor Posted by: bornxeyed
» RE: Vampire as a metaphor Posted by: aonghus36
» RE: Vampire as a metaphor Posted by: kahuna_2bears
» RE: Vampire as a metaphor Posted by: aonghus36
None
Posted by: pamschel on Nov 29, 2008 1:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, and a fear similar to the one you describe above sometimes would arise during the wolfman movies.

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A guy's outsider perspective
Posted by: pelican beak on Nov 29, 2008 5:55 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Enjoyed reading the article and following commentary. I see the lines of girls waiting for the movie, and appreciate their adolescent enthusiasm for something that rocks their boat. Handsome, brooding musical heart throbs seem to twang that same string in their psyches.

Your commentary impressed on this outsider how the didactic vampire literary vessel is a prism on the human condition that can be endlessly re-themed to creatively reflect the dynamic clash between changing cultural mores and eternally lustful desires. Thank you.

Me? Cheesy old vampire horror flicks used to scare the bejesus out of me and my 7-year old friends. Grandpa Munster had a pretty cool car. And I thought Rocky Horror wasn't bad, for a dumb musical. Y'all are way beyond my league in this genre.

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Vampires
Posted by: kepstein7777 on Nov 30, 2008 5:30 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's a waste of time to judge art or entertainment based on politics, except as a matter of interest or sociological study. As the old saying goes, there are only two kinds of movies: good ones and bad ones.

Interestingly, the article seems to be saying this, more or less, even as it seems to judge the movie based on feminist criteria.

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Funny...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd on Nov 30, 2008 7:27 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How it takes a kids' book made into a movie and a half-baked TV show to finally get any of this discussed... when Stoker, King, Poppy Brite, Rice, etc... have been around and popular for decades.

I guess the academic thought only comes in when you get away from those pesky BOOKS. After all.. they are yesterday's technology, and who really cares about that? Its just not sexy enough.

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Hey, you left out South Park's "Ungroundable"
Posted by: DaBear on Nov 30, 2008 10:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
God dammit, those bastards, they killed Kenny!

Alright, so now I have to go see Twilight. Good thing I got a free ticket for tomorrow's matinee show.

Now if I can just get the innoculationists to accidentally tell kids to smoke pot.....

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See this is why I hated English class
Posted by: Ayla87 on Dec 2, 2008 4:05 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the same way my teachers raped classical literature, Alternet's movie critics rape movies. Just shut up and enjoy the damn show.

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Twilight is trash
Posted by: l_m_n on Dec 2, 2008 5:35 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Having never read the books myself, I'll pass on my boyfriend's experience with them. His ex was a huge fan, and it disgusted him because of the dynamic between Bella and the vampire hunk.

The hunk treats Bella like dirt, slaps her around and walks all over her. Bella laps it up and asks for more.

The ex dreamed of finding a bad boy that she could fix up, just like Bella. Even though she had just left an abusive relationship herself, she was drawn to these stories.

This is not empowerment, this is downright dangerous. These books romanticize and sexualize the notion that it's ok to push women around. And, worse, they are filling teen girl's heads with all sorts of garbage about how they should expect and hope to be treated for the rest of their lives.

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Speaking as an old-school goth
Posted by: Kym525 on Dec 5, 2008 4:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm really hoping that someone will just drive a stake into this genre and let it die a quick death!

Between comic bloodsuckers who can't stand the sight of blood to vamps who drive Escalades and call each other 'bro', the entire mythos is just overdone. There's nothing new under the sun (no pun intended). It's sad that today's "romantic" vampires have been rendered harmless. They lack that dangerous yet alluring instinct that made them frightening. Today's vamp only bites "bad" people, rather than just anyone who happens to get in the way.

I really miss Bram Stoker's Count, Sheridan LeFanu's Carmilla and even the amoral Lestat.

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Frankly, Some Mistakes
Posted by: ZahirBlue on Dec 7, 2008 10:17 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm sorry but the author makes a few premises that are at best questionable. And at least one outright error.

For one, Ms. Seltzer confused "metaphor" with "allegory." True Blood's take on vampires as a minority is indeed a metaphor, but if it were to be simply a one-on-one examination of (for example) gay rights then it would be an allegory, which it clearly is not. Gays are not immortal predators whose majority views humans as a lower form of life. This is part of the conundrum at the heart of that series. While the fair treatment of such by human authorities can parallel treatment of minorities in some ways, and thus comment on same, this is not an allegory. Nor should it be one, imho.

For another, in general the details of the individual stories mentioned are selectively chosen, while others are ignored. Others have mentioned the problem of comparing Buffy with Bella--one in which vampires are far more numerous and the girl in question has supernatural powers with which to combat them, and the other where the girl has no such powers nor generally much need of same. No matter what one may think of the quality of Twilight (which I quite enjoyed myself), it is clear what is special about Bella is not any powers she might have, but rather who she is and how she sees the world. This is what earns her Edward's love, interferes with his ability to read her mind (i.e. her mind is different from others), makes her a target and also defines the whole plot. She is precisely the sort of person who could accept the Cullens, who would give herself over rather than let anyone else die, who would not be frightened away by events, etc. This is not an example of powerlessness but rather a different kind of power, one that is within the actual reach of those reading/viewing the story. Just as what drove Buffy's series was not simply the fight against monsters, but how those monsters brought into sharp relief the issues the characters themselves faced.

Nevertheless, I agree that how we as a culture view vampires is indicative of our own issues, especially vis-a-vis sexuality. The 1979 version of Dracula was indeed an attempt to put some kind of feminist orthodoxy onto the story, which alas (imho) got lost amid the muddle of many things wrong with the flick. To me, Bram Stoker's Dracula carried through with that idea much further, but kept it more believable given its historical context. Both Twilight and the most recent BBC Dracula (starring Marc Warren) more explicitly links the idea of vampirism with infection and disease, methinks because that resonates with us. But also, the relationships therein are much more interesting explorations of how power between men and women can be a complex, problematical area.

Interestingly, Barnabas Collins of Dark Shadows was a vampire that perhaps most explicitly dealt with that very issue. One bite from a vampire on that show enslaved, and only the most strong-willed individuals could resist for even a tiny bit. Barnabas, having this power, used it sometimes with great ruthlessness, yet was also disgusted by what he was and the impact his existence had. That soap opera actually was surprising relevant when you consider the complex web of relationships that revealed things about human character.

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oh please
Posted by: sophiej on Dec 21, 2008 7:39 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
how can you "get it wrong" in interpreting a myth?
That's like saying somebody got it wrong in preferring strawberry ice cream to chocolate.

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