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Anna Kérchy & Rita Antoni
University of Szeged
Rejuvenation and Immortality in/of the Female
Gothic Genre. The Feminist Potentials of
Contemporary Children’s- and Teenage Gothic
Fiction
In Memoriam
The field of literary studies we discuss in this paper is inseparable for many
of us from Professor Marinovich-Resch’s person. We remember very clearly
the amazement we felt at our very first elective seminar at the university
when Professor Marinovich-Resch taught us that Gothic is more than just a
Medievally inspired architectural style or a post-punk subcultural movement:
it is also a literary mode of writing. Our fascination increased further when
we learnt that the type of literature we have been reading ‘just for fun’ about
monsters, mad scientists, wizards, ghosts and faeries constitutes indeed a
relevant field of academic research. We immediately decided we wanted to
work with Professor Marinovich-Resch, and so we did – although it was
difficult to get among her disciples since she was such a nice person and
excellent scholar that many awaited to join her crew. Our cooperation was
quite a journey! Professor Marinovich-Resch taught us that instead of
pseudo-objective value judgments, besides meticulous analysis and scholarly
scrutiny one should remain endlessly curious about a text, try to understand
its flaws, the significance of the unsaid, and feel free to love it along with its
imperfections, and relate it to other texts one is fond of. And her approach
to texts was valid to people too: as an outstandingly open-minded
personality, she was always open to subversive people, ideas, and unusual
research topics. We still cherish the little notes she attached to articles on
feminism she photocopied for us, adding kind lines like: “Read this! I am
curious to know your opinion!” It is a sad loss that we will not be able to
hear her opinion on the topics we are discussing in this paper, we dedicate to
her memory. We chose to focus on current manifestations of the Gothic,
because, unlike authors like Fred Botting who envision the end of Gothic,
Professor Marinovich-Resch constantly emphasized the continuity of the
genre. She argued that it is also a mode of writing that can appear in any
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period of literary history due to its constant capacity to rejuvenate itself, to
resurrect just like its fantastic, undying characters. Regarding the tons of
children’s, teen and young adult popular Gothic novels seen in bookstores
these days, we can be sure she was absolutely right.
The Feminist Potentials of Contemporary Children’s Gothic
Fiction (by Anna Kérchy)
In her 2002 essay “Interrogating the Iconography of the Female Gothic”
Professor Marinovich-Resch distinguished between classic Gothic novels
penned by male authors with “masculine plots of transgression of social
taboos by an excessive male will” and a female Gothic counter-tradition. In the
latter one, the formerly heroic male transgressor turns into the villain, a
patriarch, abbot or despot with an authoritarian reach who “usurps the great
house and threatens with death, rape” or entrapment the heroine who often
reflects ironically upon her situation within the confines of her gender and
genre. (258) Professor Marinovich-Resch emphasized on numerous
occasions that the feminist project of female neo-Gothic writings is to reveal
that the happy ending of marriage, the accomplishment of the family
romance plot as a reward at the end of the gothic heroine’s quest is indeed a
male fantasy interiorized by earlier protagonists but rejected by their
increasingly independent successors.
I have particularly vivid memories of Professor Marinovich-Resch’s
exciting lecturing on a popular subgenre of female neo-gothic fiction, the socalled homely Gothic in which, instead of haunted castles in faraway lands, the
scene of mysterious events is relocated to one’s own home, normally a
primary comfort zone that suddenly appears defamiliarized as radically alien,
and potentially threatening to the inhabitant’s safety or sanity. A primary
technique of provoking the pleasurable discomfort characteristic of this
genre is the uncanny (unheimlich) or the ‘homely unhomely’ described by Freud
in 1919 as a cognitive dissonance, an emotional ambiguity, and a perceptual
flaw resulting from confusing feelings of foreignness and familiarity, a
questioning of “our sense of ontological certainty about the world through
the seeming appearance of phenomena that we know cannot exist, or the
disappearance of phenomena that we know must” (Zolkover 70). Professor
Marinovich-Resch’s example for the uncanny we could all relate to was the
childhood experience when at night the well-known furniture of the kid’s
bedroom is suddenly seen transformed into predatory monsters. The child
knows it is an armchair she is peeping at from underneath her blanket but she
imagines, and even occasionally and temporarily believes it to be a monster.
Moreover, as Freud suggests, children’s sense of the uncanny is particularly
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complex because of the incomplete process of their socialization’s psychic
repressive mechanisms, and their partial embracement of the animistic
system of beliefs, organizing most fairy tales. This makes them joyously
personify throughout daytime play the same toys they dread in nocturnal
fantasies about the inanimate coming to life. It is the deeply disturbing,
infantile, night-time experience that becomes a titillating literary adventure
and a dominant mode of enjoyment fictionally framed in the form of safe or
pretended fear in today’s children’s Gothic novels.
As Townshend claims, children’s literature initially emerged in largely
didactic forms in the eighteenth-century as a counter-reaction to the
horrifying and immoral ‘adult’ genre of Gothic fiction. Yet, as Jackson,
Coats and McGillis argue, the first piece of children’s literature children
today still recognize as a children’s book, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland,
mocked precisely the “morals and manners” of children’s instructive tales
designed to take Gothic fiction’s place, without becoming itself a Gothic
text per se. As the authors put it in the introduction of their 2008 collection
of essays entitled The Gothic in Children’s Literature. Haunting the Borders:
When the genre of didactic narrative is turned back on itself, and indeed
turned upside down and inside out, the result is not a return to the Gothic
stories children used to read before children’s literature was invented, but
the beginning of a new children’s literature tradition, the tradition to which
all subsequent children’s literature belongs.
(3)
Accordingly, the Gothic genre is rejuvenated by means of its multiple
subversions.
Among several other reasons, children’s Gothic is thoughtprovoking on accounts of challenging the nuclear heterosexual family
romance plot normatively prescribed and idealized by the patriarchal
ideology and canon. This narrative subversion, Du Plessis calls “writing
beyond the ending” (1985) and Roof deems essential for an alternative, nonhegemonic reconstruction of narratively constituted identities (1996), is
performed here from the perspective of children, who constitute
protagonists and target reading-audiences in one. I wish to argue here, that
children’s rebellious revisionings tend to be interestingly invested with
feminist ethical and political potentials. Conventional, phallogocentric
modes of cohabitation are travestied in several children’s Gothic oeuvres
where the Gothic house appointed Home ceases to be or is not meant to
last as a realm domineered by the patriarch. Examples include the extended
clan-like the Addams Family whose credo “We gladly feast on those who
would subdue us” (1991) ironically comments on the aggression lurking
under the apparent gentility of family ties; Harry Potter, a Dickensian
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orphan tormented by a disenchanted “muggle” adoptive family who gains
support from friendship instead of kinship bonds; Tim Burton’s Corpse
Bride literalizing the marital wows “till death do us apart” while spookily
confounding marital and familial relations between the living and the
(un)dead (Kérchy-Povidisa 2011, 117); and Neil Gaiman’s Coraline where the
evil doubles of parents have to be fought by the title character who by the
end of the story completely reevaluates her and our ideas of an ideal family.
Gaiman’s Coraline (2002) has been adapted into animated motion
picture by Henry Selick (2009) and a graphic novel by Russel P. Craig (2008),
yet in the followings I wish to concentrate on Gaiman’s novelistic original, a
par excellence children’s Gothic text, written for a recommended readership
of over eight-years-olds about an adventurous little girl, who abandons her
parents because they are too preoccupied with their own work to entertain
her, and explores through a secret door of their house, an Other house
inhabited by an apparently much more attentive and alluring Other mother
(and father). The Other mother eventually turns out to be a witch-like figure
who wants to replace Coraline’s eyes with buttons, “eat her up”, and “steal
her soul,” and threatens with fully engulfing her by an eternal childhood that
keeps her forever blind, undifferentiated, and passive under the Beldam’s
suffocating guardianship. Coraline courageously fights her and gains back
her real, imperfect but loving parents and most importantly, with them, her
freedom.
Parsons, Sawers, and McInally criticized Gaiman’s novel for
debilitating women’s empowerment by allowing “material feminism slip
seamlessly into [inefficient] postfeminism” (372). As they point out,
Coraline’s real mother, a fictional embodiment of material feminism, pursues
a career unsubdued to childrearing, frantically works on a gardening
catalogue, refuses to cook daily meals or to sacrifice all her attention to her
needy daughter, and shares household duties with a rather
maternal/mothering father-figure. Yet, it is also the real mother’s relative
empowerment that calls to life the fantasy of her dark double, the Other
Mother whose strength is portrayed as tyrannic and sadistic. Female-tofemale bonds are represented as either fatally dangerous, like the Other
Mother-to-daughter bond (Parsons et al. 373) or as horribly repulsive,
regressive and mutant, like Misses Spink and Forcible, the crone-like
siblings’ cocooning into one single, horribly unformed creature during one
of Coraline’s night-time visits. Moreover, it is a memory of male heroism, of
the real father bravely protecting Coraline against an attack of wild wasps,
that provides her a positive identificatory model, that becomes a token of
her coming of age and survival, and helps her fight the monstrous mother’s
female villainy. Thus, in Parsons, Sawers and McInally’s reading, Coraline’s
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maturation takes place at the cost of consolidating conventional gender
hierarchies: conforming to the Oedipal scenario she must learn to identify
with masculine bravery and fight feminine power (including her own desires
for power) to succeed at her quest. However, Parsons et al’s excellent paper
is weakened by the classic psychoanalytical terms – phallic mother, castrated
woman, penile imagery – it relies on to interpret Coraline’s journey through
a Lacanian landscape while disregarding the specificity of a girl’s adventure
story which cannot be so easily modeled conforming to the schemata of the
masculinised subject’s psychosexual maturation.
Unlike Parsons et al, I think that the annihilation of the Other
Mother figure does not mean a rejection but a reevaluation of empowered
maternity. There is a feminist critical potential lurking beneath the
Gaimanian fantasy’s inseparable conjoining of idealized and demonized
motherhood via the Gothic doubling of Coraline’s apparently-inefficient
‘good enough’ Real Mother and the seemingly-perfect monstrous Other
Mother. This character-confusion seems to be an ironic, fictional
recapitulation of Mary Russo’s argumentation on the inevitably paradoxical
social positioning of the female subjects due to the cultural enfreakment she
has to undergo as a side-effect of her engendering by patriarchal ideology.
Accordingly, if a woman fully submits to the social requirements of her
gender role (like sacrificial motherhood or feminine subservience), she is
deprived of autonomy and her subjectivity becomes primarily identified as
objectified, over-embodied and fundamentally grotesque, whereas if she
rebels against the passive scenario prescribed for her, she is considered mad
or monstrous. The real mother’s grotesque negligence and the Other
Mother’s monstrous over-protectiveness as mirror-images to each other
shed light on the difficulties feminized subjects have to face in a masculine
hegemony where femininity (or motherhood) and subjectivity (or
autonomous agency) are radically incompatible terms.
Gaiman’s negative portrayal and Coraline’s eventual rejection of the
Other Mother’s ideal caretaking as a false and flawed parental relation
demythologizes the patriarchal fantasy of submissive mothering as a
cornerstone of harmonious family relations. The animation adaptation’s
tagline “Be careful what you wish for” suggests that Coraline, in the end,
recognizes that the kind of maternal care encapsulated in the other maternal
promise “We’re here to love you and feed you and play with you and make
your life interesting” (58) “for ever and always” (42) “you and I shall
understand each other perfectly and we shall love each other perfectly as
well” (88) is not what she wants after all because it would debilitate and
deform mother and daughter alike. The Other Mother caters for but also
strictly delimits all Coraline’s needs; she gives her miraculous toys, delicious
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nourishment, and abundant care but would like to trap her infantilized in a
maternal space deprived of dreams and desires of the daughter’s own
making. As Gooding suggests, the novel illustrates that the prolongation of
the psychoanalytical myth of the “infantile desire for a permanent (re)union
with the mother” necessarily leads to “a parasitic substitute of love that
destroys difference” (397). Unlike in the first spooky tales invented by
eighteenth-century nursemaids to discipline and teach children to obey to
adult guidance, Gaiman’s contemporary children’s gothic offers for children
a lesson on the advantages of autonomy – for children and mothers alike. I
fully agree with Gooding who argues that ‘moral’ of the text resides in
Coraline’s recognition that the increasing independence her real parents
demand of her are not synonymous with rejection and abandonment, but
signify a love that encourages the prosperation of her individual otherness
and its engagement with the colourful outside world, a kind of love that does
not wish to sew uniform buttons in place of her eyes, but lets her see and
explore everything for herself, to shape a worldview of her own. In a
wonderful passage on the last trial of Coraline’s quest towards autonomous
selfhood, it is the voice of her “real, wonderful, maddening, infuriating,
glorious mother” simply saying “Well done, Coraline!” (155) that enables the
little girl “to close the door on” the fake lure of the ideal-monstrous Other
Mother’s Other World. Gooding stresses that the Real Maternal praise
comes before Coraline’s actual accomplishment of her act (of triumphing
over the Other Mother) (399) – this indeed suggests that parental
encouragement and advice are worth more than instruction and moralizing.
Both Coraline and her real Mother seem to agree on that as neither makes
any attempt at improving her imperfect mothering ways after the daughter’s
return. A new family dynamics for the twenty-first century is circumscribed
here where affection may coexist with independence. Thus, Coraline’s earlier
claim, “I think I’ve become a single child family” (48) is perhaps more
triumphant than fearful.
The very concept of childhood is reevaluated: neither idealized nor
demonized, far from the innocent immaculacy Victorians or the
polymorphous perversion Freudians identified with, it is not meant to be a
period of prolonged dependency or of precocious self-sufficiency but of
street-smart exploration and wayward imagination, activities that truly
contribute to infantile identity’s development. The new underage gothic
heroine instead of fleeing the despotic patriarch in a bridal gown fights it in
her pyjamas. As Balay opines, she is a tomboy who is at ease with
traditionally masculine tasks of “saving souls, capturing talismans, and
defeating demons” (Balay 10) but she also knows how to perform cleverly
girly activities – like playing with dolls – that she uses by means of “a
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protective coloration” (151) that help her trap the unsuspecting disembodied
hand of the other mother willing to seize her. In Balay’s words “gender
[serves] as a system of camouflage here, used to hide from danger, from our
own uncertainty, and self-doubt” (8). The creepiness of the ghost-children
emphasized by Balay is counterbalanced by Coraline’s empowering skill to
enact and manipulate gender roles in subversive ways, described above,
pointing towards gender trouble of the Butlerian kind. According to this
logic, even Coraline’s miming of her father’s masculine heroism, criticized by
Parsons et al., may qualify as a type of gender-bending “female masculinity”
(see Halberstam). Through expanding gender roles the novel “gives girls an
expanded sense of imaginary options: not only to choose masculinity instead
of femininity, but also to persistently, deliberately choose both, and to refuse
to choose entirely” (Balay 13).
Interestingly, in Coraline the expansion of gender roles coincides with
an expansion of the protagonist’s imaginative faculties – which belong to a
specifically feminine fantasy in so far as they are maternally inspired and
position the little girl as an implied author of her own story. Balay quotes an
important passage – Coraline “could only think of two things to do. Either
she could scream and try to run away, and chased around a badly lit cellar by
a huge grub thing, be chased until it caught her. Or she could do something
else. So she did something else” (110) – to convincingly demonstrate that
Coraline avoids binary logic and does not make a choice between two
alternatives, but rather “between choosing and refusing,” to opt for “that
which exists outside the realm of meaning and the possible” (9). However, I
think the emphasis here is neither on not enacting the expected feminine
responses to a potential threat, nor on the refusal to make a choice at all, but
rather on “doing something else”, the capacity to imaginatively make-up new
options, to reinvent her story. Balay’s assertion that Coraline “chooses
candles and pyjamas over flashlight and jeans because she knows she is in a
fantasy novel and wants to do it right” (11) should be complemented by the
remark that, besides conjoining horror with humour, this gesture turns her
into a highly self-reflexive author (and reader) of the events which not
simply happen to her but are incited by her imaginative agency. Numerous
details relate the horrific quest-narrative to instances of infantile creativity –
the adventures are initiated as an antidote against boredom, the fight against
the monstrous mother is regarded a game of hide-and-seek, the other house
disintegrates flattened into a child-drawn sketch – suggesting that Coraline
plays it safe as she is toying with a pretended fear called to life and resolved
by her own imagination.
According to Coates, the Gothic theme focusing on the most
common childhood fear of losing one’s Home along with the caring family,
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static comfort and protection from responsibility it affords refers to a
rationally based anxiety all children must face when growing up. Pretending
this fear serves “to work out possible plans of response” to it (Coats 83).
Significantly, the Freudian uncanny, the strangely familiar, familiarly strange
Other Home that “ought to have remained secret and hidden” is called to
life by Coraline’s dark fantasies. It is comforting to know that the horror and
the horrific are products of Coraline’s imaginative, interpretive
consciousness, since this means that, complicit in their creation, she can also
control or terminate them. This is neatly spelt out in the passage:
She crept back into the silent house, past the closed bedroom door inside
which the other mother and the other father – what? She wondered. Slept?
Waited? And then it came to her that, should she open the bedroom door
she would find it empty, or more precisely that it was an empty room and it
would remain empty until the exact moment that she opened the door.
Somehow that made it easier.
(64)
Although Coats stresses here as primal source of anxiety the
suspicion about parental sexuality Coraline both is curious and reluctant to
witness as a would-be primal scene of her psychosexual maturation, I believe
that the most telling bit about the empowering nature of Coraline’s
imaginative agency is the last phrase on “the room remaining empty until the
exact moment that she opened the door” that guarantees mastery over the
alternate universe by suggesting that its very existence depends on Coraline’s
perception of it or pretence of perceiving it. Coraline is not a victim but a
provocateur of weird circumstances. Her curiosity – conventionally a fault
that needs to be corrected in the original scary tales with a disciplinary intent
– becomes a primary token of her girl power. On exploring the Other
House she is exploring her own imaginative capacities. Via an exciting miseen-abyme, the reading experience of the child reading the children’s Gothic
novel mimes the safe play with fear enacted by the protagonist she is reading
about.
It is also noteworthy that Coraline’s imagination is inspired by her
Real mother who shows her the locked door and the hidden key, encourages
her daughter to explore the house, and hints at the possibility of adventures
lurking beyond the apparent boredom of the Real House. It is significant
that the Real Mother does not entertain Coraline but rather stimulates her to
find (out for herself) amusements of her own. In Coats’s psychoanalytical
terms, the Real Mother does not fulfil all Coraline’s desires but shows her
how desire may be pursued as a project, how boredom’s sense of loneliness
may be exploited as an imaginative space for dreaming and desiring, for
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testing who one is (86). Thus, the maternal lesson teaches imaginative
agency, courage to discover one’s own desires.
Coraline’s quest ends with a happy return to an imperfect home
where she can live, desire, and fantasize free beyond the frames of the
conventional heterosexual nuclear family romance. From then on her
ordinary being home will constitute the greatest adventure. This is nicely
encapsulated in Coraline’s words she utters on her return home, “the sky
had never seemed so sky, the world had never seemed so world...Nothing, she
thought, had ever been so interesting” (135), and, at last, “as the first stars
came out Coraline finally allowed herself to drift into sleep” (160).
The Continuity of the Gothic in Recent Teen and Young Adult
Fiction (by Rita Antoni)
“Have you ever read Udolpho, Mr. Thorpe?”
“Udolpho? Oh Lord! Not I; I never read
novels, I have something else to do.”
(Austen, 32)
Professor Marinovich-Resch chose the above quotation from Jane Austen’s
Northanger Abbey (1818) as a motto of her study on the parody of the female
Gothic (2002). Through the examples of the quoted text and Eaton
Stannard Barret’s The Heroine, or the Adventures of a Fair Romance Reader (1813)
she presented the manifold ways in which the contested genre of the female
Gothic, along with its writers and readers, became stereotyped and ridiculed.
I would like to argue that the same degradation of women’s texts and
reading habits is repeated now, two hundred years later, through the
reception and evaluation of the recent revival of the Gothic, that takes the
primary form of the new vampire craze. Thus, my aim here is to provide a
relatively new example for a phenomenon consistently emphasized by
Professor Marinovich-Resch: for the continuity of the Gothic as a mode of
writing distinguished by feminine manifestations, which are apt to create
space for (seemingly) contradictory interpretations.
From the beginnings of the genre’s coming to literary discourse,
Gothic novels – quotes Marinovich-Resch from an 1802 Scots Magazine –
were seen by anxious men as “literary abortions”, causing the “imbecility of
mind”, particularly amongst females (W.W., quoted by Howard 149, and
Marinovich-Resch 263). Today, fans of Twilight (and other, contemporary
vampire narratives) are ridiculed, infantilized, and sometimes even
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caricatured as mindless zombies.1 This judgment seems to be oblivious
about forms of popular entertainment associated with masculine readership,
and the fact that teenage boys are equally unlikely to be voracious readers of
Hegel, Proust or Dostoyevsky. On the contrary, in line with Susan Faludi’s
arguments on antifeminist backlash (1996), Leonard Sax (2008) blames the
ideological tenet (widespread both in the US/UK and in Hungary) and
popular misconception about feminism’s successful completion, hence
unnecessity – which concludes that there is no use speaking of gender – for
the reproduction of inequality in and through free time activities, too:
For more than three decades, political correctness has required that
educators and parents pretend that gender doesn’t really matter. The results
of that policy are upon us: a growing cohort of young men who spend
many hours each week playing video games and looking at pornography
online, while their sisters and friends dream of gentle werewolves who are
content to cuddle with them and dazzling vampires who will protect them
from danger. In other words, ignoring gender differences is contributing to
a growing gender divide.
(Sax 2008)
Young boys, however, are rarely ridiculed and caricatured for playing
computer games or watching pornography (neither were seemingly refined
Victorian gentlemen who stealthily visited brothels, or got maids pregnant),
although, in terms of the potential effects on the mind and treating others,
these leisure-time activities might be more dangerous than Twilight. Of
course, if we refuse to regard people as mindless consumers of popular
media, we must admit that these activities do not necessarily result in a
misogynic attitude – as reading Twilight does not necessarily make young
women readers antifeminist either (Tweezers 2008). In terms of the current
popularity of vampire romance I would like to argue that the possibility of a
critical, even resistant reading must be taken into consideration; besides,
instead of simply dismissing young women’s reading choices and labeling
these texts low-level and/or, anti-feminist, we should ask what social, cultural
factors provoke the need for and popularity of this kind of romantic fiction.
The Gothic, in its early form, is basically transgressive, with “issues
of gender deeply inscribed within” the genre (Marinovich-Resch 259). Early
Gothic novels included brave heroines, who, in certain cases, when their
safety or the self-identity was at stake, failed to conform to contemporary
feminine norms like passivity and obedience (Jancovich 20, 24). Many
women writers chose the genre because its weird world reflected the
alienated way they felt among confining patriarchal norms (van Leeuwen
1 See e. g. http://totallylookslike.icanhascheezburger.com/2009/12/23/zombie-hordetotally-looks-like-twilight-fangirl-horde/
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37), not to mention the fact that, beside promoting a more active and
confident version of femininity, Gothic fiction criticized ambitious,
oppressive power relations (Davenport-Hines 9) as well as hegemonic,
misogynic types of masculinity (Hendershot 3-4). Through the character of
the hero, who was always respectful of the heroine, an alternative, nonoppressive model of masculinity was introduced as well. Regarding all these,
it is not surprising that, in a patriarchal cultural environment where women’s
reading activity in itself has been met with suspicion (Heidenreich 15), the
popularity of this specific, rebellious genre created an even greater male
anxiety.
The attempts at rejecting and ridiculing contemporary vampire
romance, in my opinion, originate mostly in the fact that these texts
continue to promote an alternative kind of masculinity. As Auerbach claims,
the vampire figure represents – besides, we may add, eternal human fears
and desires concerning, for example, death and immortality –the cultural
climate, fears and desires in which it appears (1). In the nineteenth and early
twentieth-century, the heyday of restrained, ‘continent’ masculinity (when
men tried to preserve their wealth, blood and semen from the supposed
threat of the hungry, ‘vampiric’ women (see Dijkstra 43-4), women fell for
the overtly sexualized demon-lover, the male vampire who awakened their
desires instead of repressing and demonizing them. (Finding themselves in a
new kind of repressed situation this way is another problem.) By now the
tables have turned: our over-sexualized, porn-driven culture, instead of the
former repressing of female sexual activity, urges a compulsory
eroticization/sexualization of women (which is, furthermore, conformed to
certain patterns), and rejecting the former continence imperative finds
pseudo-scientific justification for what Jeffreys calls “male sex right”, i. e.
encouraging men to let their libido loose even in an oppressive way (calling
it, ironically, sexual ‘liberation’!). Small wonder, heterosexual women readers
will come to fancy a non-oppressive, ‘non-macho’ hero who embodies a
refined, sensible, romantic type of masculinity.
The difference between the British-American and the Hungarian
reception of the Edward-phenomenon, i.e. girls’ and young women’s
enthusiasm about the new, chivalric, protective, gentle type of vampire
introduced by Stephenie Meyer’s Twilight saga, reflect, in my opinion, the
difference between levels of feminist consciousness in the two given cultural
climates. In Hungary, there hasn’t been a strong women’s movement yet
(Arpad & Marinovich), and Gender Studies is still only sparsely taught by a
few pioneers at elective courses. This is reflected by a recent (non-academic)
essay collection on the popularity of Twilight (Mörk ed., 2011), in which
many contributors, mostly psychologists explain young girl’s attraction to
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the gentle vampire as an either acknowledged (Bagdy 82-5) or unconscious
(Jakabffy 33) desire for a pre-emancipatory state. So, instead of seeing the
new masculine ideal as a critique of hegemonic masculinity, they interpret
the Twilight-phenomenon as the (rightful) critique of emancipated femininity.
This approach doesn’t presuppose that young women don’t want the
oppressive male, it presupposes that they don’t want equality.
English and American theorists, professional and amateur critics
have a multiwave, strong, well-established feminist history, and an
educational background with Gender Studies as a more or less generally
accepted discipline and viewpoint. As a result, they tend to hail the
achievements of feminism, and demand this perspective of the text, often
accusing it of promoting antifeminist ideology (Gassley, Sax, Tweezers).
Meyer’s claim that she writes feminist fiction, because her novels are about
women’s choices, makes the situation even more complicated (Gassley). The
problem is, as Tweezers wittily points out, that somehow all women in her
work happen to ‘choose’ the role of the stay-at-home mom – I agree that
this rather seems to be the promotion of one (conservative) alternative than
the freedom of feminine choice.
Since Twilight seems to be an ambivalent work, both of these
contradictory statements can be justified on the basis of the text, and – just
like in case of the early female Gothic – both conservatives/essentialists and
progressives can draw their own conclusions. Situating myself between
these two viewpoints – i.e. as a feminist, being critical of the novels’
projected value system concerning feminine roles, but being more
‘indulgent’ than the American critics – I would like to argue that there still
are some feminist potentials in contemporary vampire fiction (to some
extent, even in Twilight!). Seemingly problematic textual elements should be –
just like in the predecessor, early female Gothic! – interpreted in terms of
ambiguity, which, driven by the contradictory motives of conforming to the
norms of society as well as realizing one’s desires and potentials as an
autonomous person, describe female existence. Furthermore, in my opinion,
critics pointing out the anti-feminist elements in the novel do not seem to
take the difference between a teenage girl’s perspective and that of a welleducated, fully conscious, adult feminist into consideration. This extension
of scope, of course, does not lead to the justification of Twilight as a feminist
accomplishment, but helps us understand the related female choices and
preferences in other possible ways than female antifeminism and an open or
repressed desire for subordination. (So, I’m attempting to defend Twilight
and its fans for feminist purposes, after all!)
The formerly mentioned ambiguity of feminine existence evolves in
the teenage years, through the quest for identity, which is, for the young girl,
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equivalent with experiencing the limiting norms of femininity and feminine
roles (de Beauvoir 282, Halberstam 6). This was the conflict the traditional
Gothic heroine had to face: she was imprisoned, objectified by a male villain
or sometimes the female proponent of a patriarchal institution (like the
church), and basic knowledge about her identity (e.g. who her parents are)
was often denied to her. In recent fiction, the heroine is in a different kind
of predicament, but still has to face internal conflicts and external threats.
The ruling ideology and its value system seems to favor only those few who
meet the actual beauty norms: Bella hardly has any self-confidence, because
she does not look like the ideal American high school girl, the athletic,
tanned, blonde and popular cheerleader. Since the beauty industry renders
women and young girls to hate their appearance and see themselves as freaks
(Bartky 139), it makes easy for the average teen reader to sympathize or
identify with the clumsy, shy, inhibited protagonist, and her astonishment at
the fact that she was chosen and is desired by the beautiful vampire, the most
handsome guy at school (who usually chooses the popular prom queen). In
this light we may be a bit more sympathetic at Bella’s constant, annoying and
banal admiration for Edward’s beauty, and understand the young fans’
enthusiasm as well. Some plot elements that feminist critics see as misogynic
(e.g. sneaking into Bella’s room at night, and watching her sleep) emphasize
the handsome Edward’s interest in the plain Bella. This does not fail to
impress neither the characters nor the readers, both of low self-esteem and
an ideological background suggesting that a woman’s worth is determined by
men’s attention. (Or, more specifically, the prestige level of men interested
in her! and being a powerful supernatural being with gorgeous looks is quite
a prestige, though). Bella even has two fine suitors, the vampire Edward and
the werewolf Jacob – teenage girls won’t read the love triangle plot as
teaching them that a woman cannot exist without men (like, for example,
Gassley does), but in terms of Bella’s supposed luck that she, despite her
plain looks, is so ‘popular’.
So – remembering the fact that Professor Marinovich-Resch saw classic fairy
tales as Gothic narratives – we can say that Twilight is a modern Cinderella
story2; in which Bella meets her vampiric ‘Prince Charming’ at a surprising
place: the high school. The often ridiculed fact that Meyer’s vampires spend
an eternity repeating secondary education over and over again (e.g. Rice,
quoted by Flood)3 also serves the aim to get closer to teenage readers,
enabling them to see their boring, confining, often frustrating surrounding in
2
See also Robinson’s 2011 analysis of Twilight as a fairy tale.
Louis and Lestat “would never hurt immortals who choose to spend eternity going to high
school over and over again in a small town – any more than they would hurt the physically
disabled or the mentally challenged.”
3
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a new, more exciting light. (Even a science lesson is much more motivating
if a vampire can be your lab partner, after all.) Furthermore, today’s popular,
in a sense, ‘de-gothicized’ vampires do not have to experience such a terrible
torment as, for example, Rice’s Claudia, whose adult mind was confined to a
five-year-old’s body. Even their concerns and conflicts are adjusted to the
level an average teenage reader can supposedly ‘digest’. Edward is not a onehundred-year-old wise being forced into the disguise of a seventeen-year-old
teenager, he is an eternal seventeen-year-old teenager. Today’s popular
vampire characters, in mentality, seem to remain at the age when they were
transformed (referring to both the number of their years as well as the
cultural-historical era!), thus get stuck in a “never-coming-of-age” plot.4
They are eternally imprisoned in an identity crisis just like the one the
teenage protagonist is experiencing, only in different terms: whilst the
teenager struggles with the ordinary difficulties accompanying the stage of
adolescense, e. g. wanting simultaneously to become an autonomous person
and a member of a community, or the feeling of being out-of-place due to
her inarticulate otherness (e.g. Bella feels somehow different, but she cannot
really specify what her ‘otherness’ exactly lies in, see Meyer 9-10), the
vampire figure hesitates between his human and vampire side, i.e. his
philanthropic vs. monstrous nature. The vampire’s presence triggers the
heroine’s conviction of her being different from other humans, in Twilight
saga even to the extent that Bella tries to justify her decision to marry
Edward at 18, a decision otherwise she is very uncomfortable with.
The human-vampire relationship built on this pattern in
contemporary fantastic fiction is usually disturbed by a (human, or, more
typically, werewolf) rival (who is destined to lose), and, more importantly,
fellow vampires who do not share the hero-protagonist’s reserved attitude
(and who are more difficult to conquer). At this point a further parallel can
be drawn with the antecedent of today’s Gothic romance: early texts had a
lot in common with crime fiction (i.e. murder, detection, a mysterious death
case to be solved), which is at the core of current plotlines, as well.
According to a frequently applied narrative element, a series of murders
takes place, of which the vampire-hero may be suspected, so the
protagonists have to find and punish the real perpetrator(s). During this
process, the human heroine gets more and more involved with the
supernatural world, and – just like in early Gothic – finds herself in
dangerous situations, from which she, either alone, or, more typically, with
the help of the hero, finally escapes. (As the classical Gothic heroine was
also helped by beneficial supernatural occurrences and creatures!) These
4
The expression is taken from the title of a 2010 novel by Adam Rex (Fat Vampire: A Never
Coming of Age Story, Balzer & Bray, HarperTeen).
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horrifying events do not divert her from the intention to stay with her
vampiric partner, or – although not as frequently as in the 1970s fiction
reflecting second wave feminism, when transformation was equal with
escape from patriarchal humanity, thus, empowerment – to become like
him. Whether this is courage or a self-effacing, destructive kind of love is,
again, the question of interpretation.
The ending also shares its ambiguous character with early Gothic,
and, the debate whether the genre is reactionary or progressive can be (and,
sometimes, is) extended to current versions that follow this tradition. The
ambiguity can be, to a certain extent, dissolved, if we take Jancovich’s
critique into consideration: merely asking whether a narrative reproduces or
rejects dominant ideology is a reductive approach (11); furthermore, one
single text, as I also referred above, can be “consumed differently within
different cultural contexts” (15). For example: the fact that Bella had to look
after her scatter-brained mother and later, cooks for her reserved father
should not, in my opinion, be examined from the adult, emancipated
woman’s perspective as strenuous, monotonous drudgery. From a teenage
girl’s viewpoint, it may rather be seen as the lack of parental authority, since
the parent-child relationship, emphasizing the girl’s cleverness and maturity,
is practically turned upside down; thus the young protagonist has an
opportunity to experience (even be proud of) her self-reliance. Bella says in
the first volume that she was born 35 years old, and gets older day by day –
it is definitely an ironic twist that she finally gives up the possibility of the
actual adult human womanhood. But this choice ironically serves the aim
that she never gets disappointed in the stay-at-home-mom ideal: firstly, the
narrative comes to an end before the point when, years, or decades later,
Bella may get tired of the eagerly chosen and romanticized “feminine”
serving role and self-effacement; furthermore, considering my view that the
vampire’s Bildung gets stuck at the point of transformation, we may as well
claim that she luckily escapes this unfortunate personal crisis, since she, after
all, is petrified, together with her naïvely romantic concepts, as an eighteenyear-old girl.
In Place of Conclusion
Since within their fictional frames the realistic context is either neglected or
predominated by a speculative play with “what if” and a non-mimetic
representation of our reality, Gothic novels are often refused to be read
seriously and are claimed to be deprived of all political, ideology-critical
potential. One of the most important lesson Professor Marinovich-Resch
has taught us was that this is not so. Not only do these oeuvres offer
TNTeF (2012) 2.1 special issue
symptomatic manifestations of collective cultural traumas, anxieties, and
desires (both of milieus re/producing and interpreting them), but they also
outline alternative plot-lines, social structures, systems of thought and
identificatory positions which are fictionally tested and may eventually affect
real life choices. The potentially beneficial influence and consciousnessraising potential of these fantastic fictional texts should not be devalued
simply on accounts the large number of people they can reach. What these
works metaphorically argue for is that on being afraid of monsters, instead
of destroying we should embrace them, and try to understand our fears,
along with its potential reasons and remedies.
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Commemorative Conference in Honor of Dr Sarolta Marinovich, November 25, 2011.
Her former students: Anna Zsófia Tóth, Anna Kérchy and Rita Antoni.