

Even if I did speak Irish, I'd always be an outsider here wouldn't I? I may learn
the password but the language of the tribe will always elude me, won't it? The
The private core will always be...hermetic, won't it?
Owen's response is a shrugging and tepid "You can decode us."
The ensuing scene in which Maire and Yolland confess their feelings for each other shows that even though she knows no English and he knows no Gaelic, they understand each other perfectly, speaking, of course, the language of love. Yet the problem of a relationship with the Other does not go away. At the end of the play we face the possibility that Yolland has been killed by Irish rebels. Neither Maire's acceptance of him nor his desire to join the tribe is enough to overcome the circumscribed roles assigned to them.
I am reminded of the problem of marrying outside the tribe as my daughter gets ready to declare publicly her commitment to Pavel, who is Russian. "Pasha," as we know him, has been agile in his assimilation and is extremely fluent in English, but he still at times has to work past a "decoding" of both American culture and language. His empathy for others in this situation is such that a particular mission for him in hotel management is to make foreigners feel welcome. This theme further resonates with me as my nephew John is in August marrying an Asian woman of the Hmong culture, far afield from John's frankly "vanilla," Midwestern, All-American, baseball star background. In addition, I have friends who have married outside the tribe, and have listened to poignant stories of the difficulty in deciding where to put down roots when neither partner is entirely at home in the other's country.
An unlikely, and I am willing to admit, eccentric analogy to the problem of marrying outside the tribe is the centerpiece of the fantasy young adult novel series Twilight. In this saga by Stephanie Meyer, the teenaged protagonist Bella is faced with this conundrum. She is romantically linked with two handsome young men, Edward Cullen and Jacob Black, who, in contrast with the awkward and self-conscious Bella, have extraordinary, supernatural powers. She does not fit into either Edward's tribe of vampires or Jacob's Native Americans, who "phase"into wolves when angered. Both men competitively hover over her and battle dark force
s to protect the seemingly hapless Bella.

In time, though, Bella makes her choice by accepting Edward's marriage proposal and making the brave decision to be "changed"with the vampire's venom, even as Edward agonizes over making her "a monster" and taking away her soul. However, Bella is aware that as a normal human she will age and die, and Edward will not. And as much as she wants to fit in with his vampire family, all of whom love her, as a human she can only decode them. She can never be a part of Edward's world as she is.
After she marries Edward, she is officially in his tribe yet physically outside of it, and Edward remains apprehensive about losing the human Bella. But the issue is forced when she becomes dangerously pregnant with a half-vampire child that exerts kicks so strong they bruise Bella's abdomen. It is both a sign that love finds a way--the pregnancy is a shock as it has been thought the two species could not breed--and evidence that maybe it shouldn't.
But it is at this point that Bella really begins to take charge of her life. Even though the baby's growth breaks a couple of ribs and Bella's pelvis, and it is believed by all that she will die in protecting the demi-vampire growing within her, Bella nevertheless refuses an abortion. In the end, she gets her wish to resign from the human race--Edward must inject her with vampire venom as the only way to save her life in childbirth.

Granted,there are some problems with this turnabout in the telling. In vampire mythology, these beings live on human blood and are hence murderers, which Meyer circumvents by making the Cullens the vanguard of a kinder and gentler "vegetarian" race that hunts animals for blood. Still, the thirst does not disappear, and their self-control strains credibility. Also, the issue of "soulless" vampires is unconvincingly parsed in an effort to portray the vampires and the transmogrified Bella sympathetically.
But to set aside theses inconsistencies in favor of what the author seems to be saying in toto, it is clear that by marrying outside the tribe, Bella finds herself. From the outside, becoming a monster is horrifying to us. It is only when she crosses the border into Edward's world that she, and we through her narrative, go beyond decoding. With new eyes, Bella becomes what she is meant to be all along.
Bella's story is an uncharacteristically hopeful message for those who choose exogamein. Like Bella, those who dare can find fulfillment and joy through crossing into another's world, as personal growth happens in risking engagement with the unknown. Through Bella's fictive universe, her example writ large brings into sharp focus exactly the same courageous act that ordinary people choose in real life situations. Given that we do not choose whom we love, we do yet have some scope in love's nurturance and our commitment to it. Marrying outside the tribe can open both worlds, and as Romeo reminds us, "stony limits cannot hold love out,/And what love can do, that dares love attempt."