The Twilight Saga: Exploring the Global Phenomenon
When Stephenie Meyer’s first novel, Twilight, was published in 2005, it had an astounding reception, selling millions of copies. The three sequels that followed—New Moon, Eclipse, and Breaking Dawn—became international bestsellers as well. The worldwide success of the movie adaptations further cemented the series as a cultural force on par with other popular franchises such as Harry Potter. But why is this? What is it about Twilight that makes it so appealing to people? And what does Twilight’s success reveal about transnational cultural trends?

In The Twilight Saga: Exploring the Global Phenomenon, Claudia Bucciferro has assembled a collection of essays that examine the series from a variety of perspectives. The essays in this volume consider both the books and the movies, emphasizing the relationships among the texts, the audience, the entertainment industry, and other aspects of the multimillion-dollar franchise. Organized into five sections, the chapters offer a contextualization of the series’ appeal, explore different types of Twilight audiences, analyze the cultural referents associated with the main characters, and present new ideas regarding representations of gender, sex, class, and race. Concluding essays examine the saga’s influence, unveiling its links to newer works such as The Hunger Games, True Blood, and Fifty Shades of Grey.

Making sense of how the popular franchise fits within larger contexts, this collection addresses Twilight from an interdisciplinary framework, including insights from history, philosophy, literature, sociology, fan studies, intercultural communication, film studies, and more. Featuring contributions by scholars from the United States, France, Spain, Chile, and Australia, this book emphasizes the international and intercultural relevance of the Twilight phenomenon. The collection is aimed at scholars and students of media and popular culture, but it will also appeal to general readers who are familiar with the series.
1116348342
The Twilight Saga: Exploring the Global Phenomenon
When Stephenie Meyer’s first novel, Twilight, was published in 2005, it had an astounding reception, selling millions of copies. The three sequels that followed—New Moon, Eclipse, and Breaking Dawn—became international bestsellers as well. The worldwide success of the movie adaptations further cemented the series as a cultural force on par with other popular franchises such as Harry Potter. But why is this? What is it about Twilight that makes it so appealing to people? And what does Twilight’s success reveal about transnational cultural trends?

In The Twilight Saga: Exploring the Global Phenomenon, Claudia Bucciferro has assembled a collection of essays that examine the series from a variety of perspectives. The essays in this volume consider both the books and the movies, emphasizing the relationships among the texts, the audience, the entertainment industry, and other aspects of the multimillion-dollar franchise. Organized into five sections, the chapters offer a contextualization of the series’ appeal, explore different types of Twilight audiences, analyze the cultural referents associated with the main characters, and present new ideas regarding representations of gender, sex, class, and race. Concluding essays examine the saga’s influence, unveiling its links to newer works such as The Hunger Games, True Blood, and Fifty Shades of Grey.

Making sense of how the popular franchise fits within larger contexts, this collection addresses Twilight from an interdisciplinary framework, including insights from history, philosophy, literature, sociology, fan studies, intercultural communication, film studies, and more. Featuring contributions by scholars from the United States, France, Spain, Chile, and Australia, this book emphasizes the international and intercultural relevance of the Twilight phenomenon. The collection is aimed at scholars and students of media and popular culture, but it will also appeal to general readers who are familiar with the series.
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The Twilight Saga: Exploring the Global Phenomenon

The Twilight Saga: Exploring the Global Phenomenon

by Claudia Bucciferro (Editor)
The Twilight Saga: Exploring the Global Phenomenon

The Twilight Saga: Exploring the Global Phenomenon

by Claudia Bucciferro (Editor)

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Overview

When Stephenie Meyer’s first novel, Twilight, was published in 2005, it had an astounding reception, selling millions of copies. The three sequels that followed—New Moon, Eclipse, and Breaking Dawn—became international bestsellers as well. The worldwide success of the movie adaptations further cemented the series as a cultural force on par with other popular franchises such as Harry Potter. But why is this? What is it about Twilight that makes it so appealing to people? And what does Twilight’s success reveal about transnational cultural trends?

In The Twilight Saga: Exploring the Global Phenomenon, Claudia Bucciferro has assembled a collection of essays that examine the series from a variety of perspectives. The essays in this volume consider both the books and the movies, emphasizing the relationships among the texts, the audience, the entertainment industry, and other aspects of the multimillion-dollar franchise. Organized into five sections, the chapters offer a contextualization of the series’ appeal, explore different types of Twilight audiences, analyze the cultural referents associated with the main characters, and present new ideas regarding representations of gender, sex, class, and race. Concluding essays examine the saga’s influence, unveiling its links to newer works such as The Hunger Games, True Blood, and Fifty Shades of Grey.

Making sense of how the popular franchise fits within larger contexts, this collection addresses Twilight from an interdisciplinary framework, including insights from history, philosophy, literature, sociology, fan studies, intercultural communication, film studies, and more. Featuring contributions by scholars from the United States, France, Spain, Chile, and Australia, this book emphasizes the international and intercultural relevance of the Twilight phenomenon. The collection is aimed at scholars and students of media and popular culture, but it will also appeal to general readers who are familiar with the series.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780810892866
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 12/12/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 260
File size: 397 KB
Age Range: 12 - 17 Years

About the Author

Claudia Bucciferro is assistant professor of communication at Gonzaga University. Her work focuses on international/intercultural communication and media studies. She is the author of FOR-GET: Identity, Media, and Democracy in Chile (2012).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Claudia Bucciferro, Editor

I. Contextualizing Twilight’s Appeal
1. Mythic Themes, Archetypes, and Metaphors: The Foundations of Twilight’s Cross-Cultural Appeal
Claudia Bucciferro
2. Manifest Destiny Forever: The Twilight Saga, History, and a Vampire’s American Dream
Michelle Maloney-Mangold
3. Reading Twilight: Fandom, Romance, and Gender in the Age of Bella
Barbara Chambers and Robert Peaslee
II. Twilight Audiences
4. “Twilight Moms” and the “Female Midlife Crisis”: Life Transitions, Fantasy, and Fandom
Laura K. Dorsey-Elson
5. Twilight and Twitter: An Ethnographic Study
Michelle Groover
6. Twilight Anti-fans: “Real” Fans and “Real” Vampires
Victoria Godwin
III. Characters and Their Cultural Referents
7. Renesmee as (R)omantic Child: A Glimpse into Bella and Edward’s Fairy Tale Cottage
Lisa Nevárez
8. Isabella Swan: A Twenty-First Century Victorian Heroine?
Gaïane Hanser
9. "Doesn’t He Own a Shirt?": Rivalry and Masculine Embodiment in Twilight
Nicole Willms
IV. Issues of Gender, Sex, Class, and Race in Twilight
10. Chastity, Power, and Delayed Gratification: The Lure of Sex in the Twilight Saga
Brynn Buskirk
11. Alice, Bella, and Economics: Financial Security and Class Mobility in Twilight
Paul Lucas
12. “I Know What You Are”: A Philosophical Look at Race, Identity, and Mixed-Blood in the Twilight Universe
Michelle Bernard
V. Beyond the Twilight Universe
13. Mainstream Monsters: The Otherness of Humans in Twilight, The Vampire Diaries, and True Blood
Emma Somogyi and Mark David Ryan
14. Individuality and Collectivity in The Hunger Games, Harry Potter, and Twilight
Lisa Weckerle
15. From Twilight to Fifty Shades of Grey: Fan Fiction, Commercial Culture, and Grassroots Creativity
Sonia Baelo-Allué

Closing Thoughts
Claudia Bucciferro
Index
About the Editor and Contributors
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