Revisiting Twilight: The Twilight Renaissance
After a slow death since the 2012 release of The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn—Part 2, Twilight as a franchise has managed to make a resurgence in the public eye. Though the series began to see nostalgic success from 2018 onwards, thanks to a Netflix streaming deal, the release of Midnight Sun, and a global pandemic, 2020 appeared to be the year of the ‘Twilight Renaissance.’
Another large factor contributing to this resurgence in popularity is the dissemination of memes and other online content, particularly on platforms such as Tumblr and TikTok. Nowadays, though it is still largely female-dominated, the Twilight fandom is composed of a diverse range of individuals, from the middle-aged women and now-adult fans which long made up the original fandom, to more men, current young adults, and queer teens.
One of the main staying powers within the fandom however, is a love of criticism for the franchise. As Sydney Dawson states in an article for Wired, “I don't think there's anyone more critical of Twilight than die-hard Twilight fans… I’m seeing elements in the books that maybe went over my head as a kid, like the ‘life begins at conception’ idea and the way Indigenous people are handled in the books,” (2023). Dawson, who wishes to conduct an ethnographic study of the series’ fandom, represents a new wave of fans who are critical of the series in a way which reflects but can still be differentiated from criticisms of the past. Just as both the series’ quality and themes have been examined in the past (Eate 2015), they continue to be examined in the modern day.
However, the main point of difference is that it appears that many of these critiques are derived from a place of nostalgia and legitimate enjoyment. Other perspectives from the Wired article (Eakin 2023) clarify this. As Amy Taylor states, “It's things that were always there, but it took a while for some of the younger generation to catch up.” Natalie Wilson said that “We can read the books and enjoy the films and still question some of their messages.” Other articles such as Haley Johnson’s ‘I'll bite: Giving into the ‘Twilight’ renaissance’ (2022) and Jamie Khan’s ‘The Twilight Renaissance of 2020, the year it stopped being called lame’ (2020) reflect similar personal experiences.
As it stands today, the Twilight fandom is able to challenge many of the gendered-biases against it as a female-dominated fandom space. It is clear that though the franchise and it’s fans have been disproportionately criticised in comparison to their actual realities, that this fandom has since developed a much healthier culture of criticism.
References Colombo, C 2021, ‘TikTokers are reigniting the 'Twilight' fandom, with memes and trends based on the movie franchise going viral’, Business Insider, 8 November, viewed 2 June 2024, <https://www.businessinsider.com/twilight-tiktok-trisha-paytas-twilightcore-memes-parodies-millennial-genz-2021-10#:~:text=To%20achieve%20a%20%22Twilight%22%20aesthetic,appearance%20of%20vampires%20in%20the>. Eakin, M 2023, ‘The Internet Is Thirsty for Twilight—Again’, Wired, 31 October, viewed 2 June 2024, <https://www.wired.com/story/twilight-15th-anniversary-internet-remembers/>. Johnson, H 2022, ‘I’ll bite: Giving into the ‘Twilight’ renaissance’, The Michigan Daily, 18 January, viewed 2 June 2024, <https://www.michigandaily.com/statement/ill-bite-giving-into-the-twilight-renaissance/>. Khan, J 2020, ‘The Twilight Renaissance of 2020, the year it stopped being called lame’, Capsule 98, viewed 2 June 2024, <https://capsule98.com/features/the-twilight-renaissance/>. Robinson, E 2019, image, The Liberator Magazine, viewed 2 June 2024, <https://theliberatormagazine.com/2019/10/31/the-twilight-renaissance/>.












