The Truth of Buffy: Essays on Fiction Illuminating Reality

The Truth of Buffy: Essays on Fiction Illuminating Reality

ISBN-10:
0786437995
ISBN-13:
9780786437993
Pub. Date:
06/24/2008
Publisher:
McFarland & Company, Incorporated Publishers
ISBN-10:
0786437995
ISBN-13:
9780786437993
Pub. Date:
06/24/2008
Publisher:
McFarland & Company, Incorporated Publishers
The Truth of Buffy: Essays on Fiction Illuminating Reality

The Truth of Buffy: Essays on Fiction Illuminating Reality

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Overview

Seemingly the most fantastical of television series, Buffy the Vampire Slayer proves on close examination to be firmly rooted in real-world concerns. In this collection of critical essays, 15 authors from several disciplines, including literature, the visual arts, theatre, philosophy, and political science, study ways in which Buffy illuminates viewers' real-life experiences.

Topics include the series' complicated portrayals of the relationship between soul, morality, and identity; whether Buffy can truly be described as a feminist icon; stereotypes of Native Americans in the episode "Pangs"; the role of signs in the interaction between Buffy's aesthetics and audience; and the problem of power and underhanded politics in the Buffy universe.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780786437993
Publisher: McFarland & Company, Incorporated Publishers
Publication date: 06/24/2008
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 248
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.70(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Emily Dial-Driver is a professor of English at Rogers State University in Claremore, Oklahoma, and fiction editor of RSU’s Cooweescoowee: A Journal of Arts and Letters. Sally Emmons-Featherston is an associate professor of English at Rogers State University and the managing editor of Cooweescoowee. Jim Ford teaches humanities, philosophy, and religion at Rogers State University and is director of the honors program. His articles have been published in the Journal of Religion, the Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, and Honors in Practice. Carolyn Anne Taylor is an associate professor of political science at Rogers State University and previously served in the Oklahoma House of Representatives. She lives in Claremore, Oklahoma.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Preface
Emily Dial-Driver     
Introduction
Jim Ford     

What’s It All About, Buffy? Victor Frank and Buffy
Emily Dial-Driver     
Got Myself a Soul? The Puzzling Treatment of the Soul in Buffy
J. Renée Cox     
Not Just Another Love Song: Buffy’s Music as Representation of Emerging Adulthood
Jacqueline Bach     
Is That Stereotype Dead? Working with and Against “Western” Stereotypes in Buffy
Sally Emmons-Featherston     
Lord Acton Is Alive and Well in Sunnydale: Politics and Power in Buffy
Kenneth S. Hicks     
Willow’s Electric Arcs: Moral Choices Sparked by Connections
Frances E. Morris     
Is It Art? The Artful “Hush” of St. Francis and the Gentlemen Blue Meanies
Gary Moeller     
Signs, Signs, Everywhere Signs: Brechtian Techniques in Buffy
David Blakely     
“The Ants Go Marching”: Effective Lyrics in Buffy Episodes
Lori M. Butler     
“Love the One You’re With”: Developing Xander
J. Michael McKeon     
Texting Buffy: Allusions of Many Kinds
Emily Dial-Driver and Jesse Stallings     
“What Shall Cordelia Say?” Buffy as Morality Play for the Twenty-First Century’s Therapeutic Ethos
Gregory J. Thompson and Sally Emmons-Featherston     
Witchy Women: Witchcraft in Buffy and in Contemporary African Culture
Juliet Evusa     
“I’m Cookie Dough”: Exploring Buffy Iconography
Kenneth S. Hicks and Carolyn Anne Taylor     
A Life Well-Lived: Buffy and the Pursuit of Happiness
Jim Ford     

Appendix: Buffy the Vampire Slayer Episodes     
Works Cited     
About the Contributors     
Index     
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