Vampires have made an incredible transformation from the days of Dracula. Vampires were once seen as scary creatures of the night who went around killing people without mercy. Now, vampires have a positive connotation. People see them as sexy, emotionally disturbed, and caring beings who will love you forever (in the literal sense), which are particularly attractive qualities when it comes to teenage girls. Take Edward Cullen of the Twilight series, for example. Edward practically embodies every women's dream guy, and that's what makes him so popular with every age group from young girls to older women. The entire image of a scary vampire is almost non-existent these days. Of all the vampire books, movies, and t.v. shows I've seen, the only truly scary vampire is Nosferatu from the classic silent movie.
But what is the cause of this transformation from scary to sexy? What caused this boom of a whole new generation of vampires? Is just simply the popularity of the Twilight series that set everyone off? Or does it say something deeper about American society? Americans are no longer afraid of the vampire. They could even be your soul mate. Hell, I want to be a vampire.
THEN VS NOW
I agree with your blog. I saw a newspaper (I don't remember which) along the same lines-- vampires in the media.
ReplyDeleteThere's also beef between the Harry Potter fans and "Twilighters." Having read all of the books in both catergories, I can say that, though very briefly and embarassingly a Twilight fan, I have steadfastly been an avid Harry Potter fan. My friends and I often watch the movies and test each other with trivia. It's very cool. Anyway, the two biggest similarities--Robert Pattinson who was gorgeous in Harry Potter 4 as Cedric Diggory, and who now plays Edward. Abilities aside, Pattinson seemed decidly less sketchy in Harry Potter, and cuter (not being completely pasty helped). Twilight's just weird.
Harry Potter has its vampiric moments too, however. In the sixth book, at one of the Slug Club parties, a very entertaining vampire is present. Rowling puts him in for comedic relief, as he stares at the partiers hungrily. But did Rowling do this intentionally, to make fun of Stephenie Meyers?
And as for the last few sentences-- I want to be a vampire too. thanks to facebook's vampires vs. werewolves, I am a vampire (haha... Juno!)
Love the contrasting photos, Zoe. I think it would be wonderful to elaborate more on this quote: "Edward practically embodies every women's dream guy, and that's what makes him so popular with every age group from young girls to older women."
ReplyDeleteWhat makes you say that? Is that uniquely American?