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What Would Buffy Do?
Is it possible to call for help ironically—and really mean it?
by Todd Hertz | posted 5/01/2004



What Would Buffy Do? The Vampire Slayer as Spiritual Guide
What Would Buffy Do? The Vampire Slayer as Spiritual Guide

What Would
Buffy Do?
The Vampire
Slayer as
Spiritual Guide

Jana Riess
Jossey-Bass,
2004 208 pp. $14.95, paper

When writer director M. Night Shyamalan released his alien-invasion movie Signs in 2002, he explained that he used such a populist, blockbuster plotline (as he also did with Sixth Sense's ghost story and Unbreakable's superhero tale) to open heady themes to audiences who normally wouldn't watch introspective movies. The Matrix also used this tactic: lure audiences with slick special effects and explosions and then ask deep philosophical questions.

Joss Whedon, creator of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, went in another direction. His cult favorite TV show certainly explored the Big Questions, but he didn't want just anyone to watch it. He says he gave the show a ridiculous name because if people couldn't get past it, he didn't want them watching. If viewers could accept the ironic name and the incongruous plot (about a California girl hunting vampires), Whedon figured, they must have the ironic sensibilities and openness needed to get what he was doing. He wanted viewers to have to work to get the show: to dedicate themselves to consistent watching and to get past the outward appearance that this was Dawson's Creek with demons.

Apparently, he found the right audience. During its seven-season run (ending in May 2003), Buffy never had big ratings. But it did win critics' raves and an aggressively loyal following that made it a cultural phenomenon. In perhaps exactly the reaction Whedon wanted from his viewers, fans didn't just watch episodes—they devoured and digested them. (For example, check out Slayage: The Online International Journal of Buffy Studies.)

Whedon's baby began as a flippant 1992 movie of the same name, in which an L.A. cheerleader is told that she is her generation's chosen one, a slayer born with supernatural abilities to fight the very real demons that walk our earth. Serving as only the film's writer, Whedon was unhappy with the cheesiness of its execution and took the story back into his own hands for the 1997 launch of the TV series.

The show started with Buffy Summers as a high school sophomore on her first day at a new high school. There, she found a mentor, librarian Rupert Giles, and two new best friends, Willow and Xander. The four of them, along with various on-and-off companions, made up a slaying tag-team nicknamed the Scooby Gang (in reference to the sleuthing teens of the cartoon).

In What Would Buffy Do?, Jana Riess calls the show a "classic medieval morality play…[that] was easily one of the most moralistic programs on tv. Although the series often expressed ambivalence about organized religion, and was created by a self-professed atheist, it offered powerful depictions of core spiritual values at work in the lives of its major characters."

Riess, the religion book editor for Publishers Weekly, has a doctorate in the history of American religion, but she doesn't write like the typical academic. Nor does she make the common mistake of theologically minded pop-culture analysts, who explain how this or that movie or series or graphic novel or hip-hop group is really Christian, despite appearances to the contrary. She readily and often acknowledges the show's mish-mash of Buddhist, Christian, Jewish, and Wiccan influences. She writes as a fan, first and foremost, although an uncommonly knowledgable and perceptive fan, and she reads Buffy the Vampire Slayer on its own terms as a show about growing and searching, loving and supporting, making mistakes and finding redemption.

Riess focuses her book on the premise that Buffy and the Scoobies' seven seasons together were a spiritual journey. It's important to note that Buffy's characters had little need for a deity of any shape. And it is clear that any atonement for sins or search for redemption (which there were a lot of) started and ended with the good works of the individual. Therefore, the spiritual journeys of the characters were primarily struggles to better understand life, to do right and not wrong, and to control the inner demons that plagued them.




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