2010-07-20

reconsidering twilight fans: a couple of links



Feminists have a complicated relationship with the Twilight series and fandom, as I have previously documented on this blog. this morning, I'd like to share a couple of items that challenge us to remember that, however retrograde and problematic the series and its surrounding franchise are in terms of gender and sexuality, writing off the fandom as gullible or unenlightened is hardly helpful and (I would argue) hardly feminist.

First, Mathilda Gregory @ The Guardian (thanks to Hanna for the link) reminds us that fans are not necessarily passively imbibing the narratives handed to them -- and it's insulting to the fans (primarily teenage girls and women) to assume they are.

Has there ever been a franchise whose fan base has been so maligned? It's starting to feel like some of the male critics of Twilight are just uneasy that, for once, something that isn't aimed at them is getting such a big slice of the zeitgeist.

Meanwhile, instead of defending the film, some feminists aren't happy either because of Bella's passivity and the tale's theme of abstinence before marriage. Well, OK, author Stephanie Meyer's devout Mormonism does give weight to that reading of the text. But it's not really as simple as that. We can presume a lot about the author's intent, but that's not necessarily the message the films' fans are taking away from it.

The second story, from Amanda Marcotte @ RhRealityCheck comes in the form of a podcast interview with Tanya Erzen about the contours of Twilight fandom. Check out the podcast or, if you can't access audio on your computer, this recent essay by Erzen @ The Revealer about the religion of Twilight fans. Here's an excerpt.

In my interviews and survey of 3,000 fans, the majority express sometimes contradictory beliefs in the supernatural while asserting adherence to traditional religious institutions. Yet, while Twilight won’t replace organized religion, it reflects a longing for sacred and extraordinary experiences in everyday life that are perhaps missing in traditional religious venues. In pilgrimages to Forks, Washington, the setting for the books (in July 2009 alone, 16,000 fans trekked to Forks like supplicants at a holy site, more than the total number of visitors in 2008), fans indulge the fantasy that a supernatural world exists alongside our own, searching for vampires in the woods and lingering outside the re-imagined home of Bella. Rather than fueling interest in vampirism, a concern among some Christian critics of the books, the series provides what Laderman calls “myths that provide profound and practical fulfillment in a chaotic and unfulfilling world.” It’s also impossible to separate these moments of spiritual enchantment from the Twilight franchise, which ceaselessly offers consumption to women and girls as a way to retain the feelings of belonging, romance and enchantment. There are Edward and Bella Barbie dolls, lip venom, calendars, video games, graphic novels, and fangs cleverly promoted and eagerly purchased at conventions and online stores. Yet, the shrines attest to the way fans also transform these objects into something personally vital within the messy entanglements of commerce and enchantment.

The impulse of a lot of feminists (including myself!) is to act to protect young women from narratives we think are abusive by arming them with the skills to deconstruct the Twilight series' sexism and anti-sex messages. However, to assume that young women don't have those skills simply because they have appropriated the stories and continue to enjoy them smacks of misogyny. That is, it plays on the stereotype that women (and young women particularly) are shallow, flighty, clueless and particularly vulnerable to outside influences. That their sense of themselves as persons worthy of respect, as persons smart enough to challenge the messages they're being fed by the media, is uniquely endangered. As Susan Douglas has pointed out recently, there are reasons to be concerned about assertions that young women don't need feminism. But it is also important to make sure that feminism does not become as didactic and authoritarian as the sexist culture we're challenging: exchanging one power-over system with another does not a revolution make.

So I'd argue: be wary of attempts to deride Twilight fans because of their age and/or their gender. And be aware of how criticism of fans -- even if it's not explicitly sexist -- trades on negative and stereotypical constructions of femininity. Like criticizing Hot Girls for being Hot rather than criticizing the culture that rewards them for meeting gendered expectations, making teenagers feel shamed for their reading and viewing choices does little to support their sense of agency and critical self-awareness that (I believe) so essential to feminist consciousness.

2 comments:

  1. Hi Anna, This is a fascinating post, especially for someone admittedly derides Twilights fans for their obsession. I found the Guardian piece interesting because in my experience it is women, not men who criticize the "Twi-hards." Most men I've met seem baffled and at little troubled that the film's messages, which they understand to be degrading and wrong, seems to be so appealing to some (especially young) women. I think it is only to be expected that young women will be the majority fanbase for Twilight. What I am critical of is the older generations of women, particularly mothers, who participate in this fandom without, it seems, an awareness that they are endorsing some very negative messages about self-worth/value/etc. As a woman beyond her teenage years, I think it is our place to respect the agency of young fans, while encouraging them to engage with issues that Twilight represents and to think critically about those troubling messages. I am disturbed when I see mothers/mentors/older sisters/etc. bonding with much younger women through Twilight, and not encouraging them to explore its more problematic topics.

    -Laura (C.)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for the thoughts, Laura! I totally agree with your point about the way older women (post-teens) who have embraced Twilight uncritically. Or at least, aren't being vocal about their critique.

    I absolutely agree that, as mentors or just people with more life experience (and feminist deconstruction skillz!) it's important to raise questions about what the books are saying. And it's deeply frustrating to me to see older women drooling over the teenage romance of the story without addressing those issues. I really like, for example, the way some school librarians have refused to withdraw Twilight from the shelves, but HAVE taken steps to help young people think about abusive relationships and how, maybe, the relationships in the book aren't very healthy.

    What I'm wary about (and to be honest, I fall into this trap myself!) is the way criticizing the romantic abuse narratives and the conservative messages in the story about sex and gender slides super easily into being critical of girls who adore the series. And it seems like what better way to turn young girls off feminist ideas than to tell them their favorite stories are unacceptable and make them feel somehow wrong or stupid for enjoying them.

    Complicated, complicated!

    ReplyDelete