That's Bella from
Twilight, by the way.
Are you thinking, Yeah, Gail, let's see you connect those three? I hope so. Because here goes.
A few days back, Megan made
a comment here at
Original Comment about reading
Olive, the Other Reindeer to a class and having the kids tell her that the story was actually a "movie" on the Cartoon Network. They'd seen the cartoon, didn't know there was a book until Megan told them about it, and for them the "movie" was it.
This reminded me of an article I saw in which the author speculated that more people had seen the movie version of
Rebecca than have read the book. I don't know if that's the case these days, but it may have been the case at the time the movie originally came out. And certainly the movie has cast a long shadow. It may very well influence the public perception of
Rebecca just as the cartoon version of
Olive, the Other Reindeer probably influences grade school aged kids' perception of that story.
I saw
Rebecca just last week. (Eat your heart out
Leila.) It's a very anemic version of the book with two major changes that undercut the story's power and one of its themes (power shifts within a marriage), and it played up romance in a big way. In an
interview that took place at the time she played Mrs. Danvers in a television production of
Rebecca, Diana Rigg said that the movie version was based on a play and not the original novel. She claimed Hitchcock couldn't get the rights to the book, only the play.
Whether it was the people responsible for the movie or the people responsible for the play,
somebody wanted to make the central relationship romantic instead of, well, pretty tragic. Thus, to the general public,
Rebecca is a romance.
This central relationship--an unequal one between an older, powerful man and a younger, powerless woman--is the same central relationship in
Twilight, which has recently been the subject of another conversation at the
child_lit listserv. (Though the
Twilight books are generally well-received, we unrepentent child_lit feminists find ourselves a little shaken by them.) Bella in
Twilight and the second Mrs. de Winter in
Rebecca have no lives beyond their men, for whom they will do anything.
I think this is a very old-fashioned concept of romance. It seems very dated to me, and may be why none of us at
The Big Read found
Rebecca very romantic. Intense and twisted and satisfying to read, but not anyone's idea of romance.
And yet, so many young girls (and adult women) are falling for that old model of romance in
Twilight.
So there you have it folks:
Olive, the Other Reindeer leads to
Rebecca leads to Bella. Ta-da!