Vampires, Werewolves, and Myth.
I realize that this topic pretty much sits at the top of the culture heap right now. Not as en vogue as it was during the mid 1990s, but it seems not to have slowed up in the literary sense. I cannot walk into a bookstore with seeing shelves and shelves about vampires and werewolves. From the romance historical to the comedies. Maybe it tickles me to see such mythic figures of horror and terror becoming iconic status symbols in our culture. But I think people miss the underlying horror of what these mythic figures stand for.
I'm not talking about the blood and gore of the horror flicks these creatures inhabit. That is horror in the most superficial, visceral way. The horror I want to dig into is the horror of the mythic figures superimposed against civilization. What exactly do these figures represent in our civilized unconscious?
Vampires evoke the cold and logical exteriors with calculating eyes and an obsession with sex and violence mixed with their hunger for blood. Werewolves live in the duality of passive-aggressiveness. They wear two masks of vunerability as human and in their terrible lycanthrope forms, they revel in the destruction and potent rage in them. They are the two ends to the human unconscious spectrum. They are yearnings to release from the constraints of civilized society. One in the cold beauty and logical hunger and the other in the fury of passion. Neither is desirable in society but they bubble to the surface in these icons. How these icons relate to us deals with how we see beneath the facade of civilization and into our inner natures.
In us is the ability to be either a Vampire or a Werewolf. We can be consumed by our vices and feed off of each other emotionally, physically, mentally, or spiritually. Or we can fall prey to unrestrained emotions to destroy the life we have or the lives around us. Sometimes we can even be a hybrid of both. This the horror that these icons truly express. The inability to walk a middle path and avoid the pitfalls of our inner natures.
Myths may not exist, but the seed of their creation and reality can manifest itself in us. These two may be creatures of darkness but they also are the faces we face in the mirror each day.
What do these cultural icons mean to you? Let me know what they represent in your eyes.
I'm not talking about the blood and gore of the horror flicks these creatures inhabit. That is horror in the most superficial, visceral way. The horror I want to dig into is the horror of the mythic figures superimposed against civilization. What exactly do these figures represent in our civilized unconscious?
Vampires evoke the cold and logical exteriors with calculating eyes and an obsession with sex and violence mixed with their hunger for blood. Werewolves live in the duality of passive-aggressiveness. They wear two masks of vunerability as human and in their terrible lycanthrope forms, they revel in the destruction and potent rage in them. They are the two ends to the human unconscious spectrum. They are yearnings to release from the constraints of civilized society. One in the cold beauty and logical hunger and the other in the fury of passion. Neither is desirable in society but they bubble to the surface in these icons. How these icons relate to us deals with how we see beneath the facade of civilization and into our inner natures.
In us is the ability to be either a Vampire or a Werewolf. We can be consumed by our vices and feed off of each other emotionally, physically, mentally, or spiritually. Or we can fall prey to unrestrained emotions to destroy the life we have or the lives around us. Sometimes we can even be a hybrid of both. This the horror that these icons truly express. The inability to walk a middle path and avoid the pitfalls of our inner natures.
Myths may not exist, but the seed of their creation and reality can manifest itself in us. These two may be creatures of darkness but they also are the faces we face in the mirror each day.
What do these cultural icons mean to you? Let me know what they represent in your eyes.
