Women loving the bad boy is more than a bit of a cliche in varied sorts of media, but the incarnations of the Byronic hero has shifted from a niche market to a popular mainstream attraction. What was once the thing of a cult phenomenon for little goth girls like me (see Labyrinth's Jareth, portrayed by rock star David Bowie, or Anne Rice's Lestat) is now a mainstream figure of attraction, from The Vampire Diaries Damon Salvatore to True Blood's Eric Northman to Thor and The Avengers Loki, to (begrudgingly) Christian Grey from the 50 Shades of Grey erotica series; the list goes on and on. Edward from Twilight does not count because Twilight should not be referenced for anything.
Tom Hiddleston portraying Loki, Norse God of Mischief in The Avengers 2012 film |
What woman does not want those traits and that ability, both in herself and in a partner?
Jareth, portrayed by David Bowie in 1984's Labyrinth |
Damon Salvatore of The Vampire Diaries |
It is not too much of a stretch then, to link the antihero to the blackface minstrelsy we have been discussing in our American Pop-Culture class, because minstrelsy was immensely popular due to the need for the average white person to indulge and walk on/imitate what was considered the literal wild side, the side that represented forbidden or taboo topics (sex, moral ambiguity, sex, alcohol, intrusive thoughts, impure thoughts, blasphemous thoughts, etc.) that were inexcusably forbidden from polite conversation . Antiheroes are another form of that same spirit behind minstrelsy, an outlet and embodiment of what we wish we were, what we want to say and do, and what we want from a partnership. They are an outlet to our darker side and in your face larger than life, so we don't have to be; the fictitious scapegoat.
It is an added bonus that they are completely politically correct, and for the most part, inoffensive. Team Byron all the way.