There have been several articles lately about how a certain segment of our society is worried that the rising popularity of vampires has gone too far. Some stories of teenagers having satanic rituals where they drink blood and claim to be reborn as vampires or werewolves have started showing up in a wide variety of publications. But what is really going on with this new popularity of vampires?
The truth is that the concept of vampires have been around for ages and there always seems to be some sort of connection between what we need in our world and what kind of monster our current vampires seem to be.
“But it was during the researching that I discovered the variety of vampires out there,” she said. “The legend, movies, novels. I found it fascinating how many forms this creature had taken. Brutal, dangerous, hideous, sexy, romantic, heroic. It’s really cool that this character can be retooled so often.”
And retooled it has been indeed. If we are now fascinated and at the same time repelled by the romanticized but also violent and highly sexual vampire that could be walking down the street or attend our local high school, what does that say about us? Are we a culture that is afraid of viral young men and so must demonize them to make them something we can accept?
Is it any wonder that this first step towards building the rebirth of the enduring character from its 18th Century beginnings to its 21st century starring roles in several television shows should have its roots in the questions of faith and death? Perhaps that is the reason we turn again to vampires to be our symbols as we live in a society that needs symbols and has lost the old ones it once relied upon. Can the turning away from old beliefs and the embracing of a new more vibrant symbol of rebirth be the very thing that is bothering these tale bearers of teenage witch covens and hidden powers amongst us?
What do you think? Are you bothered by the sudden popularity of all things supernatural? Or is it just that we now have the technology to make a witch do more than wiggle her nose on TV? I for one find this fascination with the living dead simply an extension of what most women yearn for – the unattainable man who needs us in the most elemental of ways, to sustain his life. It is not a relationship we actually want, but it has a certain allure that seems to be timeless.