
Blood Relations
Chosen Families in Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel
Jes Battis(Author)
McFarland & Co Inc (Publisher)
Published on 15. July 2005
Book
Paperback/Softback
200 pages
978-0-7864-2172-5 (ISBN)
Description
The television series Buffy and Angel revolve around radical conceptions of family. Indeed, their coherence depends on the establishment of nontraditional families that admit vampires, demons, witches, werewolves, and other bizarre characters without censuring them for their peculiarities. This work argues that what makes these characters enduring and engaging is their critical family connections--for their most involved struggles occur not within the graveyard, but around the dinner table, just as the most challenging adversarial forces that they must face are not demons or vampires but the stuff of everyday life.
What does "family" encompass within these two series? How does it relate to concepts of gender, sexuality, power and the supernatural as they emerge from the shows' complex narratives? This book explores such questions. It also examines the "chosen family" (an idea marketed specifically by successful programs such as Friends and Sex in the City within the past ten years), juxtaposing it against various images of the fractured biological family displayed in both Buffy and Angel.
Through eight chapters addressing various family-related aspects within both shows, this work plots the trajectory of this unstable notion of family, even as it is transformed, remediated, and rendered unrecognizable from a "family values" perspective by the unique and supernatural relationships that proliferate in Buffy and Angel.
What does "family" encompass within these two series? How does it relate to concepts of gender, sexuality, power and the supernatural as they emerge from the shows' complex narratives? This book explores such questions. It also examines the "chosen family" (an idea marketed specifically by successful programs such as Friends and Sex in the City within the past ten years), juxtaposing it against various images of the fractured biological family displayed in both Buffy and Angel.
Through eight chapters addressing various family-related aspects within both shows, this work plots the trajectory of this unstable notion of family, even as it is transformed, remediated, and rendered unrecognizable from a "family values" perspective by the unique and supernatural relationships that proliferate in Buffy and Angel.
Reviews / Votes
"the first scholarly book to focus on nontraditional family relations in the series...a necessary and welcome addition...well-written,well researched...insightful"-Journal of Popular Culture; "new view"-SirReadaLot.org.More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Jefferson, NC
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Interest Age: From 18 years
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Illustrations
notes, bibliography, index
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 12 mm
Weight
336 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-7864-2172-5 (9780786421725)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Jes Battis is an associate professor of English at the University of Regina. His teaching and research focus on intersections between fantasy and sexuality as they occur across a number of historical periods, including the middle ages and the eighteenth century. He is also the author of the Occult Special Investigator series, with Ace Books.
Content
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Preface
Introduction
1. "She's Not All Grown Yet": Willow Rosenberg as Hybrid, Hero and Middle Child of the Scooby Family
2. "This Carpenter Can Drywall You into the Next Century": Xander Harris as Hero, Big Brother and Male-In-Progress
3. What It Feels Like for a Slayer: Buffy Summers and the Paradox of Mothering
4. "Daddy's Home-I'm in Real Trouble Now": Fathers Who Watch in Buffy and Angel
5. Demonic Maternities, Complex Motherhoods: Cordelia, Fred and the Puzzle of Illyria
6. Buffy, Angel and the Ivory Tower: Open and Closed Family Systems
Afterword. Families Beyond Buffy (or Firefly, and Everything After)
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
Preface
Introduction
1. "She's Not All Grown Yet": Willow Rosenberg as Hybrid, Hero and Middle Child of the Scooby Family
2. "This Carpenter Can Drywall You into the Next Century": Xander Harris as Hero, Big Brother and Male-In-Progress
3. What It Feels Like for a Slayer: Buffy Summers and the Paradox of Mothering
4. "Daddy's Home-I'm in Real Trouble Now": Fathers Who Watch in Buffy and Angel
5. Demonic Maternities, Complex Motherhoods: Cordelia, Fred and the Puzzle of Illyria
6. Buffy, Angel and the Ivory Tower: Open and Closed Family Systems
Afterword. Families Beyond Buffy (or Firefly, and Everything After)
Notes
Bibliography
Index