Why Buffy matters The art of Buffy the vampire slayer

Rhonda Wilcox

Book - 2005

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Subjects
Published
London ; New York : I.B. Tauris : Distributed in the United States and Canada by Palgrave Macmillan 2005.
Language
English
Main Author
Rhonda Wilcox (-)
Physical Description
ix, 246 p. ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (p. [222]-235) and index.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781845110291
9781845110215
  • Part I. Panorama
  • The Monsters of Teen Life
  • The Long Arc of Light and Dark
  • Naming and Identity
  • When Harry Met Buffy
  • Sex and Soul: Buffy, Spike, and Redemption
  • Exiting the Text and Globalization
  • Part II. Tight Focus
  • Love ("Surprise"/"Innocence")
  • Laughter ("The Zeppo")
  • Fear: ("Hush")
  • Poetry ("Restless")
  • Death ("The Body")
  • Song ("Once More, with Feeling")
  • Part I. Panorama
  • The Monsters of Teen Life
  • The Long Arc of Light and Dark
  • Naming and Identity
  • When Harry Met Buffy
  • Sex and Soul: Buffy, Spike, and Redemption
  • Exiting the Text and Globalization
  • Part II. Tight Focus
  • Love ("Surprise"/"Innocence")
  • Laughter ("The Zeppo")
  • Fear: ("Hush")
  • Poetry ("Restless")
  • Death ("The Body")
  • Song ("Once More, with Feeling")
Review by Booklist Review

Although television is often looked down upon, Wilcox, one editor of Slayage0 , the online journal devoted to Buffy the Vampire Slayer, 0 presents a compelling argument for it as an art form as worthy of respect and acknowledgment as film or literature. She furthers her argument by using Joss Whedon's iconic show as a salient example, drawing on the depth of the characters, the symbolism in the show, and the many real-world commentaries that permeate its narrative. The first half of the book deals with everything from the significance of the characters' names in relation to their identities to parallels between Buffy0 and the Harry Potter saga, while the second half offers detailed analyses of seven of Buffy0 's finest, most complex episodes, including the ones that deal with the loss of Buffy's virginity and the almost entirely silent episode "Hush." The library of scholarly Buffy0 titles continues to grow, with Wilcox's thoughtful, accessible volume an honorable addition to it. --Kristine Huntley Copyright 2005 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This accessible collection of essays on Buffy the Vampire Slayer defends the artistic merit of the fantasy TV show with equal parts wit and insight. Wilcox, an English professor at Gordon College, is a fan of the series and doesn?t condescend to other fans or disparage what she believes is ?art, and deserves to be so studied. It is a work of literature, of language?of visual art?of music and sound.? Wilcox looks at the big-picture narrative arc and at individual episodes, finding impressive, but sometimes tenuously connected, influences at work: Joseph Campbell?s momomyth, Shakespeare, T.S. Eliot, John Donne, Virgil and Charles Dickens. ?One of the great themes of Dickens?s Bleak House,? she writes, ?is our interconnection; and one of the great themes of Buffy is the virtue of community.? Not surprisingly, the author has no patience for critics and academics who dismiss Buffy as mere ?cult TV? on the basis of its genre and argues that fantasy can have more emotional resonance than realism. Though not convincing as a work of genuine scholarship, Wilcox?s book is a serviceable addition to the canon of Buffy. (Dec.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.