Popular Culture Review Vol. 23, No. 2, Summer 2012 | Page 69

Tarzan and Sookie 65 the script characterizes as an animal: “Sharp rat-like teeth appear over the lower lip . . . The claws of the Count’s spidery fingers cover much of the [letter] . . . He looks at Hutter as a snake would hypnotize its prey.”6 The mixed metaphors strengthen Count Orlok’s connection to nature’s overwhelming and indeterminate monstrousness. These vampires are supernatural only by being so exceedingly natural. Naturally, some of the best of the new vampires are Southern. Specifically Louisianan: Anne Rice’s LeStat, Jewelle Gomez’s Gilda, and Charlaine Harris’s Bill Compton (two from New Orleans, where Faulkner’s Sutpen stashes his biracial ex-wife and child). That Buffy, Being Human, and Twilight also channel Tarzan does not negate the American South as an especial beacon. What better place for Tarzan’s dilemma of belonging?—as John Jeremiah Sullivan has written in a different context, “the region has always produced its geniuses, but nobody ever referred to it as an incubator of civilization.”7 Bill Compton was one of the boys in grey Tarzan’s Jane so esteemed, a Confederate soldier when he passed from the living to the undead. Harris might as well have named him Compson after Faulkner’s undead Quentin. The gothic incest of Faulkner and Poe is here too: when one vampire makes another, the relationship is always as parent and child, sibling-comrades, and lovers. Homosexuality, a staple subtext of vampire tales from the beginning, has risen to the surface in a preponderance of the recent fictions. The old South’s denial of interracial relations is exploded in the new South’s vampire narratives like The Gilda Stories, and True Blood. Like the Sookie Stackhouse novels on which it is based, the HBO series, set in small-town Bon Temps, Louisiana, is probably the best example of the persistence of Tarzan’s repressed preoccupations. It has orphans and kings and queens and queers, and colorblind colorful sex. Its polysexual orgy includes people who sleep with the half-animal vamps, with animal shifters, with werewolves, and, once in season two, almost with an actual bull. Bon Temps indeed. Have I mentioned that Tarzan’s first girlf riend was an ape? These new Southern vampires have reinvigorated Tarzan’s dilemma, entertaining us with their own species of literature, and in their own way getting after what Faulkner considered the only thing that can “make good writing,” the only thing “worth writing about”—“the human heart in conflict with itself.” Hendrix College, Arkansas Alex Vernon Notes 1 Warwick Sabin, “Billy Shakespeare: Southern Man,” Oxford American 73 (June 2011), 10- 11. 2 See Tarzan: Lord o f the Louisiana Jungle, prod, and dir. A1 Bohl, 2012.