Popular Culture Review Vol. 23, No. 1, Winter 2012 | Page 44

40 Popular Culture Review Other than her penchant for self-sacrifice and the capacity to attract the attention of boys, Bella isn’t really anyone special. She has no identifiable interests or talents; she is incompetent in the face of almost every challenge. She is the locus of exaggerated stereotypically feminine incapacities and selfloathing. She has no sense of direction or balance. She is prone to get bruises and scrapes just in the process of moving from one place to another and doesn’t even trust herself to explore a tide pool without falling in. When she needs something done, especially mechanical, she finds a boy to do it and watches him. (133) Typically, men watch women, objectifying the female in viewing them as a solely sexual object. In Twilight, however, Bella takes on the gaze through her first person narrative where she constantly watches Edward. While this might appear empowering to have a female character assume the gaze, it is not. Mann cites feminist philosopher Simone de Beauvoir’s argument about the masculine gaze, saying that “when the young girl internalizes and assumes the masculine gaze, de Beauvoir said, she takes up a perspective on herself as prey. As in the fairy tales, she becomes ‘an idol,’ a ‘fascinating treasure,’ ‘a marvelous fetish,’ sought after by men” (136). The Twilight series does have a fairy-tale like quality with Bella as a damsel-in-distress. Like a fairy-tale, Bella has a handsome prince to fantasize about. In particular, Bella is fascinated by Edward’s physical appearance which is similar to the other vampires in the series. The vampires’ physical beauty is so stressed that it is the first characteristic the narrator Bella observes: I stared because their faces, so different, so similar, were all devastatingly, inhumanly beautiful. They were faces you never expected to see except perhaps on the airbrushed pages of a fashion magazine. Or painted by an old master as the face of an angel. It was hard to decide who was the most beautiful - maybe the perfect blond girl, or the bronze-haired boy. {Twilight 19) The comparison to “airbrushed pages of a fashion magazine” and a painted “face of an angel” elevates the vampire beauty to a humanly unachievable ideal Bella compares herself to. Just as the pictures in fashion magazines are airbrushed to eliminate any flaws, the vampires have no aesthetic flaws as well. That the vampires appear “so different” and yet also “so similar” implies that while each one has their own individual beauty, this creates a uniform beauty among the group. The beautiful vampires are the products of the vampire transformation, where their imperfect human body is turned into a “perfect” vampire one. Instead of blood being the cause of the transformation, it is vampire venom