Friday, November 16, 2012

shades of twilight



For those of you who know me, you know my dislike for Twilight and Fifty Shades. Before I delve any further, let me dispel any such notions that you think my dislike is due to ignorance. That, I have not read the books, therefore I cannot possibly judge them. I have read the first two books in the Twilight series, and the entire three books of Fifty Shades.

While these series of books illustrates the dominant/submissive relationship they do so in an unhealthy manner. The dominant character controls every aspect of the submissive’s life. He decides what she wears, what she eats, which friends she sees, which activities she does, etc. Everything is controlled by the dominant. This dynamic is extremely prevalent within the romance genre, but it is not a healthy model for a good relationship. I repeat, because this is important, this is not a healthy model!

However, all of that being said, the Fifty Shades series has brought the world of BDSM into the mainstream. Lingerie stores, sex shops, theaters, and even cookbooks are taking the premise of this book and satirizing the hell out of it.   

As amusing as this is, this would not be possible unless the majority of people knew what the series was about. And, here comes the frightening part, at least for me. The majority of readers do not recognize that this is an abusive relationship. The majority of people do not realize that this is not the model for a dominant/submissive relationship.

If you are new to the world of S&M and have no idea what it entails, then this book could serve as a reference for you as long as you were able to remove the relationship dynamics illustrated within.
So, now that I’ve bashed a book series, let me offer you books that illustrate good relationships.

The first is Laurell K Hamilton’s Anita Blake and Merry Gentry series. These books offer a decent amount of sexy, lustful scenes, with a healthy dose of murder mysteries and paranormal activity. However, this series is not for you if you have no interest in reading stories about vampires, werewolves, fairies and other creatures of the nether realms. Also, the graphic violence that is present may not be for everyone.

The next series of books is The Black Jewels series by Anne Bishop. While this story takes place within the fantasy realm there are not many creatures of the night entwined and the violence is less graphic than LKH.

The final recommendation is Kushiel’s Dart by Jaqueline Carey. This author is new to me,  and I cannot say anything for other books in her series, but this book exhibited a strong female character that was submissive behind closed doors. 

I have yet to find books that are not within the fantasy genre to exhibit a healthy dominant/submissive relationship. If you know of one I’d be more than happy to check it out!

2 comments:

  1. I have not read either series. Your comments about Fifty Shades is more than I knew about the series at all.. wait, it's a series? I thought it was one book. I think most of our culture misunderstands submission and dominance. In a healthy S/D relationship, the submissive is actually in control. The dominant should want the submissive to be healthy and well taken care of. So if the submissive has needs then the dominant will want to meet those needs so that the relationship can continue etc.. I don't know if that makes any sense, but it does. Power play is a complicated thing. I've read books too, but I can't think of their names off the top of my head. Don't think they were the ones you mentioned though.

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    1. rebecca that makes perfect sense! and yes, that is what a healthy dom/sub relationship should be. unfortunately, the mainstream culture has been given terrible examples of such things :(

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