Ethic of romance in the Twilight series Dream-fulfilled in the honourable male vampire

This paper mainly comments on the following inter-related topics: 1) the author's dream and longings as the source of the novels’ drive; 2) the novels’ ethical approach to girl-boy romance as constituting the narrative’s appeal and 3) the thirst for the old-fashioned moral values as the “chord...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dagmang, Ferdinand D.
Format: text
Published: Animo Repository 2013
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/3761
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Institution: De La Salle University
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Summary:This paper mainly comments on the following inter-related topics: 1) the author's dream and longings as the source of the novels’ drive; 2) the novels’ ethical approach to girl-boy romance as constituting the narrative’s appeal and 3) the thirst for the old-fashioned moral values as the “chord in every reader’s heart.” I will argue that Twilight is a timely offer to young adult readers who consume it with enthusiasm because of their search and mood for what is right in romantic contexts. With these goals in mind, I will show how Meyer has transformed her dream (dream-A) and longings (dream-B) into a creative and ethical act through literary composition. I will also argue for the convergence of the readers’ response to Twilight as a dovetailing between the authorial ethical position and the readers’ longing (dream-C) for what is ethical.