I hope you guys don’t mind if I ask this here, but I’ve asked several people who have read Twilight and nobody has been able to explain this to me.
The word “werewolf” itself is an Old English word meaning “man-wolf”. Yet as far as I can tell, all werewolves mentioned in the story are American Indians. So are there European werewolves that are just unmentioned (perhaps they were exterminated by humans/vampires?) Or are we to believe that the existence of the myth of werewolves in Europe came about independently, and coincidentally there just happened to be people who can actually turn into wolves on the other side of the planet? Perhaps there was some kind of pre-Columbian contact between the shape-shifting tribes and ancient Anglo-Saxons? Is any of this explained in-canon? Have fans come up with other explanations?
There are two species of werewolf in Twilight canon. One, the Children of the Moon, gets no screentime or detailed treatment at all. They were from Europe and are now presumed extinct, killed off by some vampires at the behest of one vampire who didn’t like them.
The other, the Quileute tribe wolves, features more heavily. Their older legends don’t use the word “werewolf”; the ones who show up in the story call themselves werewolves because that is the obvious modern American thing to call a person who can turn into a giant wolf. The “wolf” part in particular was an arbitrary selection made when the species came into existence; they could have been bears or eagles or voles or something instead. So the technical term for them is “shapeshifter”, but this doesn’t overcome the sheer obviousness of “werewolf”. This is all canon or obvious extrapolation therefrom, not fanon.
Thanks for answering. I also looked up the definition of “werewolf” on a Twilight wiki, but I didn’t see any explanation.
I was really hoping the canon explanation was pre-Columbian contact between Vikings and native werewolves in North America. The prequel series writes itself!
Stephenie Meyer by her own description knew absolutely nothing about vampires when she started writing and did zero research. I doubt that she had any idea where werewolf legends came from. That said, there are some Native American stories that are very similar to werewolves. The idea of a “skinwalker” shows up in some cultures, and the Navajo especially have a developed set of myths that has some resemblance. So if one felt a need to retcon this one would explain it with the natives simply using “werewolf” as the common English term for what they were.
(One could imagine fanfic where some of the werewolves are unhappy with this term and see using it as buying into European cultural imperialism or something like that.)
There are werecritters all over the place. I did a paper on “fantasy convergent evolution” in college and I was finding references to werecrocodiles and werebears and weresharks and random stuff, from all kinds of cultures that had no crosspollination.
I hope you guys don’t mind if I ask this here, but I’ve asked several people who have read Twilight and nobody has been able to explain this to me.
The word “werewolf” itself is an Old English word meaning “man-wolf”. Yet as far as I can tell, all werewolves mentioned in the story are American Indians. So are there European werewolves that are just unmentioned (perhaps they were exterminated by humans/vampires?) Or are we to believe that the existence of the myth of werewolves in Europe came about independently, and coincidentally there just happened to be people who can actually turn into wolves on the other side of the planet? Perhaps there was some kind of pre-Columbian contact between the shape-shifting tribes and ancient Anglo-Saxons? Is any of this explained in-canon? Have fans come up with other explanations?
There are two species of werewolf in Twilight canon. One, the Children of the Moon, gets no screentime or detailed treatment at all. They were from Europe and are now presumed extinct, killed off by some vampires at the behest of one vampire who didn’t like them.
The other, the Quileute tribe wolves, features more heavily. Their older legends don’t use the word “werewolf”; the ones who show up in the story call themselves werewolves because that is the obvious modern American thing to call a person who can turn into a giant wolf. The “wolf” part in particular was an arbitrary selection made when the species came into existence; they could have been bears or eagles or voles or something instead. So the technical term for them is “shapeshifter”, but this doesn’t overcome the sheer obviousness of “werewolf”. This is all canon or obvious extrapolation therefrom, not fanon.
Thanks for answering. I also looked up the definition of “werewolf” on a Twilight wiki, but I didn’t see any explanation.
I was really hoping the canon explanation was pre-Columbian contact between Vikings and native werewolves in North America. The prequel series writes itself!
Stephenie Meyer by her own description knew absolutely nothing about vampires when she started writing and did zero research. I doubt that she had any idea where werewolf legends came from. That said, there are some Native American stories that are very similar to werewolves. The idea of a “skinwalker” shows up in some cultures, and the Navajo especially have a developed set of myths that has some resemblance. So if one felt a need to retcon this one would explain it with the natives simply using “werewolf” as the common English term for what they were.
(One could imagine fanfic where some of the werewolves are unhappy with this term and see using it as buying into European cultural imperialism or something like that.)
There are werecritters all over the place. I did a paper on “fantasy convergent evolution” in college and I was finding references to werecrocodiles and werebears and weresharks and random stuff, from all kinds of cultures that had no crosspollination.