Twilight Fandom

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I traveled out to Forks, Washington, this past June for the Twilight party of the year, Literature-Inspired Fan Events’ (LIFE) Summer School in Forks. I gave two talks, jump started my final preps for Spotlight, and met a bunch of Twilight fandom celebrities and true-believing TwiHards. It was a blast; the LIFE folks did a bang-up job which I hope they will do again in coming years.

One of best surprises I had in Forks was in meeting the Bloodsuckers, a group of young women from Philadelphia — neighbors meeting in far away Forks — who podCast about Twilight. They asked me a bunch of questions me after my first talk and posted my answers along with their Hillywood Players and the Bella Swan Project interviews. Their website is called Bloodsuckers — A Twilight PodCast. Check it out and let me know how the interview sounds!

Natalie Wilson of Seduced by Twilight, my sister-in-arms online, battling against the rip-tide of academic disdain for the serious discussion of Stephenie Meyer’s Twilight novels, sent me a ‘Call for Papers’ today to share with serious readers here. Time to get to work, folks, and put together your thoughts for a collection of critical essays on Cullens and Qulieutes, and Artistry, Meaning, and Cultural topics.

CFP: Critical Perspectives on the Twilight Saga, Edited by Maggie Parke and Natalie Wilson

We are currently accepting proposals for essays to be included in an edited collection on Stephenie Meyer’s Twilight Saga. We are looking for essays that examine the Twilight series, the fandom, and the films from various analytical and methodological perspectives. We are particularly interested in submissions from the following disciplines: film studies, sociology/popular culture studies, women’s/gender studies, critical race studies, literature, psychology, and education. Read the rest of this entry »

From the New York Times Women’s Fall Fashion Guide, the perfect booties to reveal your inner-Jacob (or Leah). At $1,000 a pair, you don’t need to worry about everyone in your school showing up with a pair of these custom-made beauties. H/T to BeliefNet’s Idol Chatter.

werewolf shoes

Where would you wear shoes like this? Maybe in a run through Utah cornfields cut with New Moon themes. Really, you couldn’t make this stuff up. (H/T Matthew)

Over at Pop Culture Junkies, Alea notes that the very striking and signature “look” of the Twilight cover featuring a woman’s arms with apple being offered seems to have been borrowed. Note the similarity with the cover of a collection of C. S. Lewis essays called Words to Live By: A Guide for the Merely Christian:

twilight_book_cover

Twilight Look Alike

Nota bene: I rush to add the “borrowing” has been done by HarperOne; Words to Live By was published in 2007 during the first waves of Twilight mania. There’s no way this wasn’t an intentional “hat tip,” to put the kindest spin on that. But this Twilight echoing in book covers has just begun! Read the rest of this entry »

It’s been a long month! I have been to the West Coast and back three times with trips to Forks, LA, San Francisco, and Manhattan in the last four weeks which jet-setting has reminded me I’m not designed for that life-style. My plan for August is ‘write Spotlight‘ from which I hope to be sharing interesting pieces here on a regular basis; please check back here regularly and let me know what you think.

Before getting into that project, though, I have to say what a great time I had — and everyone I met there seemed to have — at the Summer School in Forks (SSIF) Twilight Symposium last month. Billed as the “only unofficial literary symposium for the Twilight Saga,” SSIF was the brain-child of Ann-Laurel Nickel and her team of serious readers at Literature Inspired Fan Events (LIFE) and, for a four day conference without a big-player sponsor and one held at a seriously remote location, I was astonished and impressed by:

  • the variety and depth of the academic programming,
  • the number of people who attended (not all teen girls, believe me), and
  • the professional use of and quality of the venues and activities.

Yes, it was held at the real world Forks High School, a bizarre collection of 20th century educational architecture (a large building from every other decade unless I’m much mistaken) and the hotels where fans stayed were roadside motels that State Forest visitors keep in business. But the running of the program by LIFE — from room scheduling and AV functioning to meals, dances, and bus rides to the Native American reservation — was flawless.

The weird — and unfortunate — thing about this is that no one seemed to have noticed or bothered to express public appreciation for what the LIFE crew had done. Read the rest of this entry »

p1040680_edited-10(Photo credit: Deborah Chan)

I hope to see you at the ‘Summer School in Forks’ Twilight Symposium at the end of the month!