Twilight by Stephenie Meyer
Throughout the course of time, vampire stories have changed to
symbolize the context between the supernatural grotesque characters to real
life human nature. There’s more to vampirism than sucking blood, sleeping in
coffins, or fleeing away in bat form. We have to think of how vampirism
connects itself with the day-to-day life of a normal human. Even Though early
novels show vampirism in a way that is more complex in theory, Stephanie
Meyer's Twilight brings vampirism in the norm, which humanizes vampires in a
different way that has been done in the past.
In Twilight, the vampires are hidden internally, instead of
externally. For example, all of the normal characters can see them, they know
who they are as people, and they develop acquaintance with them without being
the prey. These are not the type of vampires to hide during the day, then hunt
through the night. Instead, the vampires withhold the secrets of their
mortality from others around them. This context humanizes the vampire to the
readers instead of us believing that they are monsters. The book also gives the
vampire's a more sex appeal imagery, instead of the disturbing monster look.
Romanticism also carries a different value when it comes to
Twilight. Bella and Edward’s encounter relates to audiences who have lust over
mysterious attractive strangers especially in their teenage years. The reader
would encounter this theory when Bella starts to think about Edward more after;
he rudely avoids her during their first encounter. Later on in the story, we
see Edward as the hero when he saves her from being raped. We are introduced to
Edward’s fountain of truth when he walks into the sun and sparkles to show that
he is a vampire. This context symbolizes how we as humans open up to our
significant others honesty and to prevail our hidden truths.
The main course of love subtext that one could see in this novel
is that Edward refuses to imprint Bella, even though she accepts him and wants
to join him in the essence of immortality. We see how Edward is miserable with
being immortal, and does not wants to Bella to be in internal pain with him,
but we also see that Bella wants to be with him forever.
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