Bella's Passion: Romanticising Suicide and Demonising Sex in 'Twilight'

Title
Bella's Passion: Romanticising Suicide and Demonising Sex in 'Twilight'
Publication Date
2013
Author(s)
McKay, Kathryn
Maple, Myfanwy
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9398-4886
Email: mmaple2@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:mmaple2
Editor
Editor(s): Maria Kulp, Nonia Williams Korteling and Kathy McKay
Type of document
Book Chapter
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Inter-Disciplinary Press
Place of publication
Oxford, United Kingdom
Edition
1
Series
Probing the Boundaries
UNE publication id
une:15228
Abstract
The 'Twilight' saga is a worldwide phenomenon, inspiring Twihards of all ages into breathless endorsements of its apparently ageless romance. While media critiques have focused on questionable literary skills and the obsession it has inspired in its fans, few have examined the idolization of a female heroine so passive in her initial acceptance of death and so active in her desire to die in order to be a good woman to Edward. Bella's fluctuations between active and passive suicidality correspond with the manner in which her sexual desires are conceptualized in terms of insatiability and denial. Only allowed fulfilment of her sexual desires after marriage, Bella's sexual passions then became reframed into physical violence, exemplified by the bruises she rejoices in finding inscribed along her body. This violence extends into a pregnancy that ultimately and inevitably kills her - a fulfilment of her desire throughout the novels. Rather than kill her own body, which would harm the baby, she allows the baby to kill her - and Edward to save her by turning her into a vampire. Beneath this narrative lies a desire for death that is romanticized by the fact that Bella does not die at all - she becomes immortal. It is important to dissect the trajectory of the language Bella uses to conceptualize and articulate death, sex, and love throughout the novels. This will illustrate the frightening ease with which a modern romantic idol is stripped of her agency and self-value in a way that denies her sexual desire but encourages her desire to die.
Link
Citation
Searching for the Words: How Can We Tell Our Stories of Suicide?, p. 59-71
ISBN
9781848882195
Start page
59
End page
71

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