The Aesthetics of Culture in Buffy the Vampire Slayer

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The Aesthetics of Culture in "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" is an academic publication relating to the fictional Buffyverse established by TV series, Buffy and Angel.

The Aesthetics of Culture in BtVS
Author Matthew Pateman
Subject(s) Buffyverse
Genre(s) academic publication, Media Study
Publisher McFarland & Company
Publication date January 18, 2006
Pages 288
Size and weight 8.0 x 5.4 x 0.6 inches / 13.92 ounces
ISBN ISBN 0-7864-2249-1

[edit] Book description

Examination of the cultural commentary contained in Buffy. The show was a somewhat unusual vehicle used to present, quite typical views of late 20th century culture-teenage problems via the character of Buffy Summers. The covers topics such as broken homes and the search for meaning in life. Subtler themes are always included; such as cultural views of knowledge, ethnicity and history.

Organized into two sections:

(1) Through the lens of Buffy’s confrontation with culture
(2) second, from the complex perspectives the individual characters. Issues such as values, ethical choices and the implications of one’s actions are discussed—without ever losing sight of the limitations of a medium that will always be dominated by financial concerns. The final chapter summarizes what Buffy has to say about today’s society.

An appendix lists Buffy episodes in chronological order.

[edit] External links

A truly excellent book that offers insightful readings of individual episodes as well as a masterful account of the show's relationship with ethics, culture and history: all via the notion of aesthetics - brilliant.

Buffyverse academic books


Buffyverse academic books in alphabetical order.

The Aesthetics of Culture in BtVS | Bite Me | Blood Relations | BtVS and Philosophy | Buffy (BFI) | Fighting the Forces | Five Seasons of Angel | Joss Whedon: The Genius Behind Buffy | Reading Angel | Reading the Vampire Slayer | Seven Seasons of Buffy | Sex and the Slayer | Slayer Slang | Televised Morality | What Would Buffy Do? | Why Buffy Matters