I bet I could find a lot of blog posts about this from the BDSM point of view. But the truth is, I haven’t really looked. But I do read lalana’s blog regularly. And she talked about Twilight by Stephenie Meyer, briefly. And linked to HSMom’s post about it. Which prompted me to remember “Hey! I ranted about Twilight to Antonio!”
Then I made the classic leap from “I’ve thought about this…” cleanly into “Clearly I MUST share my ramblings with the internet!”
I fear my logic may be crumbling there. (She says as though that’s ever stopped her…)
FYI, most of this was written to Antonio, after I had only read the first book. So I don’t think there are any spoilers beyond book one.
(ASIDE: If you haven’t read Twilight, and don’t have the time/energy/desire to read the whole thing, or you just want to read an intensely hilarious chapter-by-chapter parody of it, go here. That’s shinga’s livejournal and that parody makes me stupidly happy.)
I’ve noticed many people have judged the relationship between Mary Sue Bella and Edward as simply misogynistic, and I was intrigued.
Maybe eighty pages in, I started noticing things…
When I reached his table, I stood behind the chair across from him, unsure.
"Why don’t you sit with me today?" he asked, smiling.
I sat down automatically.
[...]
He smiled again, and then he changed the subject. "I think your friends are angry with me for stealing you."
"They’ll survive." I could feel their stares boring into my back.
"I might not give you back, though," he said with wicked glint in his eye.
I gulped.
He laughed. "You look worried."
"No," I said, but, ridiculously, my voice broke.
(pp. 87-88)
Nothing big. Not really… It just stirred something in me.
Later, Bella gets sick at school after seeing blood. Edward sees her being taken to the nurse by another boy. He literally picks her up and carries her there himself, sending the other guy away. She shouts to be put down, multiple times. All ignored. Then she wants to go home, on her own, but he insists she go with him. To highlight that insistence, he physically DRAGS her to the car. She thinks about escaping and he promises to drag her back if she tries.
In basic phrasing, Edward is overtly domineering. For example, even when he uses "please" it’s clear he’s not asking:
"Distract me, please," he ordered.
(p. 163)
"Drink," he ordered.
I sipped at my soda obediently, and then drank more deeply, surprised by how thirsty I was.
(p. 169)
For some reason, that one REALLY stuck with me.
Another example is when Bella attempts to place conditions on a conversation with Edward. He warns her (with tone) that he’s absolutely not one to suffer provisions from the likes of her…
"I’ll tell you about it in the car. If…" I paused.
"There are conditions?" He raised one eyebrow, his voice ominous.
(p. 172)
"Do you want to ride with me today?" he asked, amused by my expression as he caught me by surprise yet again. There was uncertainty in his voice. He was really giving me a choice – I was free to refuse…
(p. 197)
(FYI – EVERYTHING I’ve quoted thus far happens before page 200 and before they are really together as a couple… Yeah…)
Anyway, it made me think…
First, I don’t know that much about the Mormon faith, but my first thought was that perhaps Meyer’s faith follows the belief (or a belief similar to) Christian headship in marriage. (If you don’t know what that is, it’s summed up pretty well, direct from the source, in Ephesians 5:22-33.)
So I figured, hell, if that’s what the author is going for, and it makes the characters happy… Rock on, Bella and Edward! Christian headship FTW!
But then things like this, beginning on page 302:
"That suits me," he replied, his face relaxing into a gentle smile. "Bring on the shackles – I’m your prisoner." But his long hands formed manacles around my wrists as he spoke."
And for three solid pages (until they get interrupted and Edward literally HAS to let her go) he keeps her wrists locked in his hands, manipulating her position with his superhuman strength. He spends the time engaging in light conversation, such as talking endlessly about his seething rage-like jealousy when other boys so much as talk to Bella, how it deeply bothers him he can’t know precisely what she is thinking (and I mean every SINGLE thought in her head – he can read all minds but Bella’s) at all times, and how he came to watch her sleep at night while he wrestled with his desire for her and/or to suck her blood and kill her. Not so Christ-like, yanno?
I mean, okay, I’ve seen Secretary. And this all struck me as a little bit like that. Not the same, obviously. But with elements of obvious domination and submission in a work of fiction.
I thought Secretary was done pretty well. It was very clearly a life-changing (arguably life-saving) discovery on the part of Maggie Gyllenhaal’s character, Lee, that she wanted to be in submission to a man, specifically Edward Grey. And it’s difficult for them both to swallow that they had an urge for a dynamic that seemed so not normal. So they really had to hash it out, battle back and forth with desire vs. decorum, to come to their version of (what I believe was inarguably) consent, mutual understanding, and a powerful love.
There was no scene where they sit down and talk over their dynamic, but there was the scene where Edward tells Lee that they can’t do this every day, and she says “Why not?” and then how she fights for the relationship (desk scene = <3) because she CLEARLY loves it and loves him and is a better person for it and knows he is too. And they wrap it all up with the ending of domestic bliss.
I think love and possession can be mingled. (Duh.) Some see it as Christian headship, some simply as a more traditional marriage/relationship, some as BDSM, some as a bunch of FancyPants, internet-savvy terms I’ve probably never even heard of.
And that’s cool. I don’t take issue with any of that. But I took issue with Twilight.
My problem, and it was a raging problem throughout the book, was where the hell was any acknowledgment or consent of this dynamic?
If Meyer wanted to confront EITHER dynamic – dominance and submission, or abuse, that’d be great. But to tread water just enough so she doesn’t have to address either? That’s just gutless, in my opinion, and potentially seriously damaging to her fans. I was 13 once too. And I didn’t have a fucking clue. And I was impressionable. And hormonal. And confused. And emotional. And desperately searching for something, even though I didn’t know what. And… Maybe I’m alone in that, but I don’t think so.
I’m gonna have to do this in stages, cause I have like 5 more posts of yours starred to comment on, and I’m getting sleepy.
Part of what I loved about the book was the “fairy tale love”. The other part was the fact that Edward was so dominant, Bella so submissive. But, you have an extremely valid point. Without CONSENT, the relationships that many of us live on a day to day basis could be and would be considered abusive. Period. No arguments. And while I understand that putting a “consent” scene in there may have ruined the flow… it blurs the line that so many teenager girls already can’t see clearly. I was IN an abusive relationship as a young teen – hell, I was in more than one. And I actively looked for things/people to tell me that what I was dealing with was “normal” and/or accepted. Things to justify what I was putting up with. The “love” behind it doesn’t make it ok. So yeah, you did it again. Damn, I’m getting tired of you making me think
Reply
Chloe Reply:
January 25th, 2009 at 1:59 pm
lalana~
I have some deductive logic notes that could put ANYONE into a state of complete mental suspension. You read them and, for about three hours, you’ll be incapable of thinking about anything. They’re brilliant, really. One day I should just post those and let everyone take a nice nap. My gift to the world is naptime.
~Chloe
Reply
Just came across this blog randomly, but I have this huge thing where Twilight drives me absolutely insane, so I just had to comment to say: yes. EXACTLY. Edward/Bella seems, in a lot of ways, like a classic dom/sub kind of relationship (well, until the last third of the last book, and–I suppose I shouldn’t spoil it…?), and you know what, if Edward and Bella are into that, then that’s fine. Except that’s not how it’s presented. It’s all OMG TRUE LOVE, OMG SO ROMANTIC, OMG I WISH MY BOYFRIEND WERE JUST LIKE EDWARD. I think maybe Bella even is into this stuff a little, because–again, in the last book, which I probably shouldn’t spoil, but it’s relevant–when they finally do have sex, Bella ends up pretty badly bruised because, y’know, he’s a superhuman vampire. He freaks out and feels horrible because he hurt her; she didn’t really notice it happening and doesn’t care. Uh, did you guys suddenly switch sides in the whole maybe-into-BDSM-thing? Do you want to maybe talk about how Bella is okay with this and you can both enjoy yourselves if Edward will stop his pity party? …No? No discussion at all to speak of? Okay then.
So again, yeah, I totally agree with you–this stuff would be okay except for the way it’s presented, the kinky-ish stuff without any of the important consent issues, and that’s what makes it so creepy.
Reply