Popular Culture Review Vol. 23, No. 1, Winter 2012 | Page 47

Mirror. Mirror. 43 happy it was over. This was an easier death than others I’d faced. Oddly peaceful [...] I saw him, and I had no will to fight.. .My subconscious had stored Edward away in flawless detail, saving him for this final moment. I could see his perfect face as if he were really there; the exact shade of his icy skin, the shape of his lips, the line of his jaw, the gold tinting in his furious eyes [...] Why would I fight when I was so happy where I was? Even as my lungs burned for more air and my legs cramped in the icy water, I was content. I’d forgotten what real happiness felt like. (357-361) Bella values Edward, “his perfect face” and “flawless detail,” so much that she is willing to literally die to be with him. The juxtaposition of “real happiness” with the description of her drowning suggests that for Bella, “real happiness” is masochism. Yet just as the Edward she sees here is not real, neither is her happiness; it is just a temporary relief from her emotional pain. According to Gimlin, “What women look like becomes symbolic of their characters—indeed, of their very selves” (4). After Edward leaves, Bella feels “lifeless” inside; as a result, she intends to make her physical body “lifeless” as well (95). Bella believes that by endangering herself, she is proving her love for Edward by demonstrating the extremes she is willing to go to be with him and thus feel special. She FV