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Mormon Influence, Imagery Run Deep Through 'Twilight'

Twilight

First Posted: 06/24/10 09:19 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 05:50 PM ET

By Angela Aleiss
Religion News Service

LOS ANGELES (RNS) Ever since Bram Stoker's "Dracula" began haunting the imagination in 1897, popular culture has identified Christian symbols--crucifixes, holy water, Communion wafers--as weapons to ward off a blood-thirsty vampire.

The "Twilight" novels and film franchise have religious associations, too--but most of them come from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the Mormons).

As the film's "Twi-hard" fans get ready for the third "Twilight" installment, "Eclipse," to open in theaters on June 30, few are likely to recognize the religious references in the film based on the novels by Stephenie Meyer, herself a Mormon.

"I think people make up all these Mormon references just so they can publish 'Twilight' articles in respectable publications like The New York Times," actor Robert Pattinson (Edward, the film's central vampire character), told Entertainment Weekly. "Even Stephenie said it doesn't mean any of that."

It's possible that Meyer never set out to weave Mormon imagery into the 'Twilight' background. Yet intentional or otherwise, it's hard to ignore:

-- The story's teenage heroine, Bella, avoids coffee, tea, alcohol and tobacco--not unlike the Mormons' "Word of Wisdom" health code. Bella also advises her father to "cut back on steak," much like the Mormon teaching to eat meat and poultry "sparingly."

-- Feminists have questioned Bella's frequent cooking and cleaning--household chores that reflect a strong Mormon work ethic and traditional roles for women. The official motto for heavily Mormon Utah is "Industry," and its symbol is the beehive.

-- A crucial Mormon belief is that humans can become divine. In the "Twilight" series, the Cullen family of vampires was once human but now lives without death in a resurrected condition. Their immortality is a kind of probationary period for eternal life. Meyer describes the Cullens, particularly Edward, as "godlike" and "inhumanly beautiful."

-- Mormon believe angels are resurrected beings of flesh and bone. The most familiar is Moroni, who stands high atop Mormon temples, trumpet in hand. The Book of Mormon says Moroni was a fifth-century prophet who visited founder Joseph Smith in 1823. Smith described Moroni as radiating light and "glorious beyond description."

Bella describes her vampire boyfriend Edward as an angel whom she can't imagine "any more glorious." Edward's skin sparkles in the sunlight, and he visits Bella's bedroom at night. But Mormon angels don't have wings; in the "Twilight" film, Edward sits in the science lab, the outstretched wings of a stuffed white owl just over his shoulders.

-- A unique Mormon teaching is that marriages are "sealed" for eternity; spouses are referred to as eternal companions and eternal partners. Bella describes her relationship with Edward as "forever."

-- Bella and Edward's marriage, and her quick pregnancy, underscore the Mormon emphasis on the family. But Bella's half human/vampire fetus nearly destroys her, so her distraught husband suggests an abortion and artificial insemination. Mormons permit abortions if the mother's life is in danger, and artificial insemination is an option for married couples.

Bella quickly vetoes both abortion and artificial insemination, reinforcing the essential Mormon teaching of individual choice, or "agency." Meyer has said that the apple on the cover of the first "Twilight" novel represents Eve's choice in the Garden of Eden. The poster for "Eclipse" includes the line: "It all begins ... with a choice." The patriarch of the vampire family, Carlisle Cullen, supports Bella when he explains, "It wouldn't be right to make such a choice for her, to force her."

-- By the conclusion of the "Twilight" series, Bella's Quileute Indian friend, Jacob, "imprints" on her daughter, meaning he will marry the girl when she's older and establish a genetic link to her vampire family. Mormons believe they share a common heritage with Native Americans through ancient Israel.

-- The Book of Mormon teaches that a remnant of these ancient people came to America around 600 B.C.; their descendents, the Lamanites, are among the ancestors of the Native Americans. Quileute names in the series are decidedly Hebrew: Jacob, Paul, Sam, Ephraim, Jared, Seth, Joshua, Levi, Rebecca and Rachel. Jacob's last name is Black, a reference to the Lamanites' "skin of blackness" (metaphorically, a religious rather than an ethnic distinction).

Bram Stoker probably never imagined that vampires would actually represent a religious doctrine. But more than a century later, "Twilight" shows that these nocturnal creatures can accommodate just about anything.

(Angela Aleiss teaches film and religion at University of California, Los Angeles.)

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By Angela Aleiss Religion News Service LOS ANGELES (RNS) Ever since Bram Stoker's "Dracula" began haunting the imagination in 1897, popular culture has identified Christian symbols--crucifixes, holy ...
By Angela Aleiss Religion News Service LOS ANGELES (RNS) Ever since Bram Stoker's "Dracula" began haunting the imagination in 1897, popular culture has identified Christian symbols--crucifixes, holy ...
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GoodwithWood
Dis eas all yoooour fault
07:32 PM on 07/24/2010
The Mormon influence is even more apparent in the writer of BattleStar Galactica.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MAragon
11:00 PM on 07/13/2010
If it quacks like a duck...but seriously, I think I'm getting Vamped out here and I haven't even been roped into reading these books or seeing the movies.
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by-the-sea-
Happiness hit her like a bullet in the back...
09:45 PM on 07/07/2010
Dumb article...Mormonism is a made up religion, or more accurately, a full on dangerous cult! To be a Mormon, you are required to give up 10% of your income, and Smith was a con man who plagiarized most of the book of Mormon..don't care if Twilight has references to a silly "religion," it's fiction no matter what!
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GoodwithWood
Dis eas all yoooour fault
07:27 PM on 07/24/2010
All religions are made up, Silly and run by conmen
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bsc
12:09 PM on 07/07/2010
meyer is a terrible writer
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
cinemaven
Follow me on Twitter :)
03:11 AM on 07/07/2010
I think this is a simple case of a writer, writing what she knows. Examples of Christian imagery can just as easily be found in books written by a Christian author. It's experience, not indoctrination. A science fiction author I admire is often accused of also putting Mormon influences in his books but if you have a teen son, the Ender series of books, especially Enders Game by Orson Scott Card is a must read for them (an you) and if you're a writer, his book on writing is also a must read.

A good book is a good book... the Twilight series didn't strike a chord for me in any way (and the movies even less) but obviously, they reached a large number of people so that makes them good books.
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MarkInIrvine
fuzzy-headed knee-jerk liberal and proud of it
03:38 PM on 07/06/2010
COOL! Another reason to dislike all this vampire crap.
03:04 PM on 07/06/2010
The Twilight actors suck; the Twilight Movies suck. Author is a Mormon, so yeah I'm sure there are shades of her beliefs coming through in dialog (whatever there is of it in the movies) and practices of the main characters. But again -- Who cares, they suck.
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dwayner
11:55 AM on 07/24/2010
Aren't vampires supposed to "suck"?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
buttercup78
02:32 PM on 07/06/2010
I've read the books and did notice that Bella and Edward seemed very chaste. I wasn't surprised when I found out later that the author is Mormon. I don't think the imagery was intentional. Meyers doesn't seem to be capable of that type of writing. She has mastered the simile and the metaphor, but intentionally weaving her religious beliefs into the story to somehow influence her readers? Anyone accusing her of such a thing obviously hasn't read her books.

I have to throw in a recommendation for any adults that actually enjoyed Twilight. Do yourselves a favor and start reading the Sookie Stackhouse books. Cooler vampires, cooler werewolves, cooler heroine... if you like to waste precious time reading crap (like me!), Charlaine Harris is a much better writer.
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Euterpe360
I'm just a little bi-partisan
12:51 PM on 07/06/2010
A lot of the imagery could be correlated to any number of religions and faiths out there, and much of what's brought up here is in the movie to resonate with the audience on a purely "social talking point" basis, of which many have inherent religious undertones.
09:12 AM on 07/06/2010
Interesting, but I think this article is reaching for something that is not there. Bella telling her dad to cut back on steak as evidence of the Word of Wisdom? Yes, it does say that, but Bella is a teenage girl. Religious or not, I would imagine a lot of them saying the same thing.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SaraMN00
08:27 PM on 07/03/2010
I've read all the books, and I have to disagree. Just a couple of examples: "Feminists have questioned Bella's frequent cooking and cleaning..." Well, in the story Bella lives with her single father and no siblings. He is a police officer and works weird hours. She takes care of her dad-when she cooks a meal for herself she makes a plate for him. So? My mom died. I take care of my dad in the same way. I'm certainly not Mormon.
She avoids coffee, tea, alcohol and tobacco. I say good for her.
Seriously, I liked the books and thought they were a fun read, something different from reading my usual James Patterson or Patricia Cornwell books. I highly doubt everyone that reads them is going to turn Mormon. I have to agree with Robert Pattinson's quote.
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06:26 PM on 07/05/2010
thank you for catching the flaws in the authors reasoning. Mormons are not the only religion to promote these ideas, try 7th day adventist, JW's or any of the forms of christianity started i nthe new world.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Gronkie
Radical Independent
01:41 AM on 07/03/2010
Do they wear magic underwear in the movies?
08:44 PM on 07/02/2010
I don't understand how people didn't see the imagery in the first place. I read the books, I've seen the movies, it's soooo obvious. But then again, I'm not a 13-yr-old tween foaming at the mouth for Edward Cullen...
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MikeHermit
Proud Atheist
06:54 PM on 07/01/2010
It could all be a stretch, could just be normal life influences, or she could really be implimenting her religion into this series.

For me to have more knowledge I would need to either read the books or watch the movies or both. I am not willing to make such a sacrifice.
12:27 AM on 07/01/2010
As a practicing Mormon, I have to say that the writer of this article is clutching at straws -especially the abortion/Moroni/Native American angles. The only Mormon "influence" that holds water is the fact that the main character avoids tobacco, alcohol, coffee and tea. And quite frankly, MANY people, not only Mormons, avoid those things just in the pursuit of good health. Ask yourself this, Ms. Arleiss: Had you known nothing of Stephanie Meyer's background, would you have made ANY connection to Mormonism whatsoever? I think not.