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Buffy
the Vampire Slayer: The Greek Hero Revisited
©
Laurel Bowman, 2002
Department of Greek and Roman Studies, University of Victoria
(preliminary comments -
I'm just learning to think about television and film, and there is a lot
I don't know. I haven't really dealt at all in this paper with all the
questions posed by the medium of television or film. I am also new to
the field of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and there is a burgeoning bibliography
on the series which I am in no sense in control of; I'm just beginning
there too. What I've done in this paper is try to play to my strengths,
insofar as I have any, which are, looking at texts, reading for intertextuality,
and thinking about mythical patterns. But insofar as I have treated the
series in the same way I would a written text I know I've done it an injustice.
This is only my first approach.)
Before we ask what influence
classical myths, or models, may have on contemporary stories, we need
to ask some preliminary questions: do they? Do they really? And how does
it matter?
Do we have any reason to think
that a classical model has had any direct influence on 21st-century
story we're reading? Are the apparent analogies between the ancient story
and the modern rendition actual signs of influence, or simply coincidental
parallels? If the latter, can such unconscious echoes still tell us something
either about the modern story, or its ancient rendition? How does the
use of the ancient material illuminate the story currently, or the story
formerly, being told?
When Joss Whedon, the creator
of the film and television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, set
out to write his original script, it was with the conscious intention
of subverting an established genre - the teen horror movie. In interviews
- this is the kind of information we just can't get about Sophokles -
he's said as much. Apparently the idea came to him after watching one
too many horror movies where the cute blonde airhead cheerleader takes
a shortcut through the alleyway, meets the (horrific fill-in-the-blank)
monster, and comes to a quick and sticky end. And he thought, what if
the blonde airhead could take care of herself? What if she was a superhero?
This conscious decision to subvert the "horror movie" form by taking the
stereotypical "victim" of the genre - a small, blonde, fashion-conscious,
frivolous "girlie girl" - and make her the hero produced a cult movie
and a popular television series now in its sixth year of production.
Whedon subverted the genre
twice, not once, with this substitution. He didn't simply make the "hero"
female, while leaving her equipped with all the standard male attributes
of size, armour, adulthood, and that constellation of behaviours which
taken altogether signify to us "acting like a man". (An example of that
kind of single shift produced "Xena the Warrior Princess", for several
reasons including that one a much less interesting series, at least to
me). He made the hero female, yes; but more than that, he also left her
with all of the feminine markers which usually, in the horror genre, signify
not only "girl" but "victim". She's small (5'2") and slender; she's unusually
pretty; she dresses in skimpy outfits; she is not a good student; she
usually has a boyfriend and lost her virginity halfway through season
2 (in a legion of teen slasher movies, virginity is the only protection
from an ugly death; at least, the victims tend not to have it, while the
survivors tend to have hung onto theirs) ; she's self-absorbed and can
be easily distracted from the task at hand, particularly by boys; her
name, for heaven's sake, is "Buffy". If you saw her in "Friday the Thirteenth
Part 21" you'd mark her down as "victim number three on the right". In
classical terms, she's not Klytaimnestra or even Deianeira; more than
anything she looks like Iole, the mutely sexy one who doesn't even get
a speaking part as her world collapses around her, out of her control.
The decision to take such a
person and make her the hero of the story has made the series a favourite
subject for feminist criticism. Buffy the Vampire Slayer doesn't
say "see, a woman can act like a man and be a hero", but "see, a woman
does not HAVE to act like a man to be a hero". Working out what it means
to a woman who is a hero has been the ongoing project of the last five
seasons - and into the sixth - of the series. But the genre Joss Whedon
began by subverting is in no sense a "classical" genre. So why do I think
Buffy the Vampire Slayer has anything to do with classical myth?
I think it does because the
question "what is a woman who is a hero?" inevitably raises the question
"what is a hero?" And I think it's fair to say that in Western literature
that question inevitably resonates with classical models. Even if this
were not generally the case, it is certainly so when the "hero" spends
his or her time fighting monsters, large fanged lizard-gods, trolls, demons,
vampires, and the whole class of supernatural baddies traditionally found
littering a classical hero's path. It's true that they are found in other
traditions as well - folklore heroes of every culture defeat non-human
monsters. Further, many of the monsters of the Buffyverse - as it is popularly
called - are drawn quite consciously from Christian, not classical, tradition;
for instance vampires and demons. In fact Rupert Giles, my personal hero,
until this year Buffy's mentor and the member of the group responsible
for identifying the monster-of-the-week (and- more importantly - its vulnerable
points), has recourse most often to medieval Christian texts and codices
in his research on her behalf. (Though his grasp of the classical languages,
not only Greek and Latin but also Hebrew, Sanskrit, Egyptian and Mayan
hieroglyphics, and Akkadian cuneiform, is truly humbling, and an inspiration
to us all. The episode in which he argued in conversational Latin with
the forces of darkness was particularly impressive - though a Latinist
recently told me it's not THAT impressive; my conversational Latin is
perhaps not as swift as it used to be.) And, again, if we ask Joss Whedon
what we cannot ask Sophokles, "what is the inspiration for the story lines
of your series?", the answer, he says, is the comic books he spent his
entire adolescence reading by the hundreds, and not, as I might have hoped,
the "Golden Book of Myths for Boys and Girls".
That the series' producers
make use at least occasionally of classically-trained advisors cannot
be doubted, for reasons I'll come to in a moment. And consciously or not,
the series is heavily dependent on classical models in its treatment of
the life of its hero. In the remainder of this paper, I will touch briefly
on an example of a conscious reference to - and adroit use of - a classical
text in the series, and then discuss more generally the classical model
of the hero's life which is being reworked in Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

This image is a still from
the last episode of Season 4. This episode was entirely taken up with
the dreams of the four lead characters. In this particular scene, Willow,
a witch, dreams that she is (according to the script) "painting Greek
letters" on the back of her lover Tara (the woman in the picture), as
they have a conversation. The inscription itself is only on screen for
12 seconds (usually with the camera in motion.) I don't sight-read Greek
that fast, particularly not when it's in motion, all in capital letters
with no breaks between the words, and painted on someone's back. Fortunately,
I had the episode on tape, so I could rewind, pause it, and satisfy myself
that I was right, and the one word I'd thought I'd caught sight of in
the second line probably WAS "Aphrodita". On closer examination I realised
that the first word had to be "poikilothron", and it dawned on me what
the inscription had to be: (transliteration) "poikilothron athanat'
Aphrodita, pai Dios doloploke, lissomai se, me m'asaisi med' oniaisi damna,
potnia, thumon ..." - ("Ornately throned deathless Aphrodite, wile-weaving
daughter of Zeus, I beg you, don't overcome my spirit with pain and care,
mistress...") - Sappho 1, the invocation to Aphrodite.
This was impressive for a number
of reasons. First, just because it was the very last place I would ever
have expected to see Greek at all. Second, because they got it right -
there may be an extra iota in the inscription, or that may be a trick
of the light; but it's otherwise correct, and the format is correct for
an 'inscription' (capitals, no breaks). Third, because that particular
inscription was exactly appropriate to the scene on so many levels. As
Greek, it establishes the two women, both witches, as adepts in the use
of ancient arcana. The poem, as a poem of Sappho, is generally appropriate
(or would be popularly believed to be generally appropriate) to the relationship
between the two women, who are lovers. It is actually an invocation of
a goddess, and the witches have been shown invoking goddesses in magical
rituals in other episodes. So far the inscription does nothing more than
reinforce the representation of the two women and their relationship which
has been established already in the series. But the specific content of
this poem is also predictive of events later in the series. In it, the
poet asks Aphrodite to come to her, not to overpower her heart with pain,
but to assist her. And Aphrodite offers to inspire whomever the poet desires:
"If she runs away, soon she shall pursue; ... if she does not love, soon
she shall love - even unwilling".
The implications of the poem,
that Willow is going to lose the love of someone - presumably Tara - and
want her back, are clear enough; and indeed that happened this season
(more than a year later). But the reasons for the breakup are also implied
in the poem. By the beginning of this season, Willow has become increasingly
dependent on the use of magic, and has begun using it to make people -
even her friends, and even Tara - do as she wishes. The poem is by a poet
- a writer - who wants Aphrodite to make an unwilling woman return her
love; and it is being written on her lover's back by a woman who will
later use magic against that same no-longer-willing lover.
Taken altogether, what can
we make of this? That the producers know someone who can at least find
their way to the Loeb Greek-and-English editions, tell them how to make
the Greek text look like an inscription, and choose a poem which will
be appropriate to a pair of lesbian lovers one of whom is later going
to start dominating the other through the use of magic (though perhaps
they got lucky with that last bit). This is impressive enough - and I
hope their advisor was well paid (and why wasn't it me?). But even more
impressive is the fact that the producers of Buffy the Vampire Slayer
were willing to put this level of attention to detail, to getting it right,
into a scene that was on screen, as I said, for a total of twelve seconds.
It is this, more than anything, that convinces me that any other classical
reference I may find in the series was placed there with care, and not
something that too close attention to detail on my part has caused me
to invent.
With this example of careful
attention to classical detail in mind, I would like now to turn to a broader
example of a use of a classical myth in the series: the myth of Orpheus
and Eurydice, and Demeter and Persephone, in an episode which aired this
fall. A demon king of some "hell dimension" - there are several underworlds
in Buffy, to allow for as many plot twists as the writers find necessary
- is summoned to Sunnydale. It turns out that he has the right to take
back with him to the Underworld, as his bride, whoever it was originally
summoned him; apparently, Buffy's little sister Dawn. Anya, a reformed
vengeance demon who now works with Buffy, says when she hears this "Dawn
may have been ill-advised in summoning him, but I've seen some of these
underworld child bride deals and, and they never end well. Well, maybe
once." Buffy goes to rescue her sister, who is sitting in a throne beside
the demon in approved Queen of the Underworld style. All ends well, when
it turns out that Dawn was not in fact the demon's summoner, and he releases
her. But there are echoes of several classical myths in this episode.
Dawn plays Persephone, the child bride, (as Anya noted) to Buffy's Demeter,
as the mother-surrogate. Dawn is Eurydice to Buffy's Orpheus; and here
the fact that this was the "musical episode" is relevant. The particular
attribute of this demon king is that he inspires everyone around him to
burst into song and dance about their inmost feelings. When Buffy came
to rescue Dawn she sang and danced in front of the demon, and there's
a clear implication, at the end of the episode, that Buffy, like Orpheus,
entertained the king of the underworld enough that he was willing to let
her beloved go.
But finally, Buffy is herself
both Orpheus and Eurydice. Because at the end of last season, Buffy died
to save the world. At the beginning of this season, she was brought back
from death via magic by the witch, Willow, with the help of some of her
other friends. But she was unwilling to come, because she was in heaven;
something she finally admits to her friends, in song, in this same musical
episode. She resents her resurrection, however, and has not really come
back to life yet. She's simply been "going through the motions", as she
sings herself in the episode, unable to forget the heaven from which she
was dragged. So Buffy, as Demeter, saves her daughter-figure Persephone
from marriage to the Lord of the Underworld. Buffy, as Orpheus, entertains
the Lord of the Underworld through song sufficiently that he lets her
beloved go; Buffy, as Eurydice, dies and has to be retrieved from the
afterlife; and Buffy, as Eurydice, can't quite come back to life because
- again like Orpheus - she keeps looking back, over her shoulder, at the
afterlife, the heaven, that she herself has left behind.
Finally, the overall structure
of the story of Buffy's life as a hero, as it's been revealed over the
last 5 1/2 years of the series, shows strong parallels to the patterns
of classical heroic myth, particularly the pattern of the "Hero's Journey",
as developed by Joseph Campbell in his mostly-Jungian "Hero with a
Thousand Faces" (Pantheon, 1949, and never since out of print so far
as I know).
Buffy's story also shows some
parallels to Lord Raglan's "Heroic Pattern". The "childhood" part of the
pattern - the hero should be the son of a royal virgin and of a king,
who is possibly her mother's close relative, but there's something mysterious
about the conception and he's also reputed to be the son of a god; at
birth an effort is made to kill him, often by his father or grandfather;
he's spirited away and raised by foster parents; little is known of his
childhood - doesn't fit at all, of course. But this makes sense; "super
powers", insofar as Greek heroes had them , were a product of their divine
ancestry, but divine ancestry had disruptive implications for their birth
'families', which affected the pattern in predictable ways and so produce
a number of the other steps in Raglan's "heroic pattern". (The
possible illegitimacy of the child is reflected in the effort to kill
him at birth and the fact that he is often raised by foster-parents, for
example.) But Buffy's superpowers are not the result - only the equivalent
- of divine ancestry. She is raised, like Perseus and Theseus, by a single
mother, however; and her powers do descend on her at the end of puberty
(16), the same general time as a hero's divine ancestry or heroic quest
usually becomes known (think of Theseus again; or Perseus, or Herakles).
Lord Raglan's pattern fits
Buffy better after childhood. She goes on a quest, in fact several. The
actual model for her quest is not the single exploit of a Perseus, but
the nearly never-ending labours of Herakles, thanks to the demands of
a serializing medium. She does manage to marry a prince, or at least consummate
a relationship with one, or arguably more than one (it depends whom you
define as a prince), though so far these things have ended badly; she
does die mysteriously in a high place; she does conquer death, and more
than once. But on the most generous interpretation of Lord Raglan's 22
stages of the hero's career, Buffy has covered at most six. (Many of the
non-childhood stages belong to later life, and Buffy hasn't got there
yet, but as they involve finding her kingdom and ruling there, I don't
really expect her to.)
The parallels with Campbell's
"Hero's Journey", however, are so close that I cannot think they
are not deliberate. In fact, I think a case can be made that Buffy's story
is predicated not so much on classical myth, as on classical and mythological
scholarship; and that a well-thumbed copy of "The Hero with a Thousand
Faces" is probably on Joss Whedon's bedside table.
Campbell's "Hero's Journey"
has three basic stages: the departure, the initiation, and the return.
(It differs from both Jung and Lord Raglan's versions of the "Hero's
Journey" in that it includes a "return" phase, which will be important
for my argument.) This pattern doesn't fit any one classical hero in its
entirety; Campbell appears to have put it together by patching different
stages from different hero's lives together, to produce his overarching
"monomyth". However, the whole progression fits Buffy pretty well.
In the first stage, the "Departure",
the hero is called to become a hero. Usually he resists. Eventually he
gives in, and receives some form of aid, perhaps supernatural, perhaps
in the form of a mentor. He crosses the first threshold - the first task
of the hero - and then falls into the "abyss", a dark night of the soul.
Buffy, when informed that she
was the Slayer, the Chosen One, resisted mightily before she accepted
her call, both in the original film and again in the series. She eventually
accepts her destiny, and receives help in the form of a mentor, Rupert
Giles, her Watcher, who trains her to be a Slayer, and does the backup
research for her. He also fights alongside her when necessary, as do a
small group of friends she collects around her. The "first threshold"
task comes when she faces the Master, a vampire overlord who, it's prophesied,
will kill her if she faces him. But if she doesn't face him, he will break
out of the underworld in which he's currently trapped (a physical underworld,
a cavern under Sunnydale) and bring the apocalypse, some form of hell
on earth. She accepts her death, and he does in fact kill her. Fortunately
a little CPR from her friends restores her to life and she wins the day.
Her "abyss" happens before the fight, when she is struggling to accept
the fact that she has to die, at the age of 16, to save the world.
In the second stage, the "Initiation",
the hero embarks on his quest, meets his "anima", the goddess-figure who
inspires him; meets his "shadow", the excluded Other, the dark side of
the "anima", whom he must overcome; faces his ultimate challenge, victory
over death (usually); is rewarded with some form of apotheosis and ultimate
gift. Herakles works well here: the labours are the quest; all the women
are the 'dark force', and he never does really overcome them; dies; is
apotheosed; and receives the reward of immortality and marriage, finally,
to the anima he never quite met in life.
Buffy embarks on the serious
business of slaying in season 2, after the death of the Master. She falls
in love with her animus, her inspiration, Angel, a vampire, but one with
a soul. They are "True Loves". It's all the more appalling, then, that
as a result of the consummation of their relationship he loses his soul
and becomes "Angelus", the Shadow, the temptation she must overcome. Which,
ultimately, she does, by killing him, in one of her two great heroic moments
on the series. (He survives, re-ensouled, and starts his own show in L.A.)
It's after this event that she falls into a serious "abyss", but recovers
and carries on, over the next few years, with her monster-slaying quest.
Three years later this culminates in her heroic sacrifice of herself to
save the world, by jumping from a high tower to close a portal into a
hell-dimension. She is then rewarded with an "apotheosis" - she's allowed
to rest at last, and spend her time in heaven, rewarded, like Herakles,
for her labours for the world.
So far her story matches the
Heroic Journey fairly closely; as closely as Herakles' does, or better.
But it's this season that is proving the true test of Joss Whedon's use
of the Heroic Journey pattern. Because the third stage of the Hero's
Journey - the Return - is often the most difficult; most heroes don't
bother with it. (Herakles, once he achieves his apotheosis, does not come
back to join the world of mortals again.) And in fact the first part of
the Return, like the first part of the Call, is usually met with resistance;
the hero doesn't want to come. Buffy, it turns out, did not want to leave
heaven. Odysseus doesn't seem to have wanted to leave Calypso, for the
first few years. When the hero does leave the Magic Kingdom (whatever
it is), to return to the normal world, he is often pursued by the inhabitants,
or some other resistance is given to his return. Odysseus met with a storm
from Poseidon which destroyed his raft and all his supplies. Buffy was
pursued by a demon who followed her and tried to kill her and take her
place. The Hero frequently can't return to the normal world without assistance
from someone. For Odysseus, it was the Phaeacians. For Buffy, it is another
vampire, Spike, who assists her to accept her return to life. The last
three stages of the "Return" - "Crossing the Return Threshold", "Mastering
the Two Worlds", and the "Freedom to Live" - are the stages in which the
hero comes to accept the 'normal' world again, and learns to live both
as a hero AND as a human being in the daily round of life. As I said,
most heroes don't bother with this stage. Odysseus, who does eventually
return to Penelope, does manage it, but is one of the few - and we're
told that he heads off again, is a hero once more, in the end.
Buffy, this year, is in the
"Return" phase of the Hero's Journey, and is having terrible trouble
with it. In previous years, Buffy has gone out and slain monsters in a
cheerful, confident and heroic sort of way, which made for entertaining
television. But this season she is struggling with the crossing of the
return threshold, and treating her friends and family, for whom the audience
sympathizes, very badly in the process. Her deep and continuing depression,
and her refusal to accept that she has returned at all, that she has duties
of any kind, or that 'normal' life is worth living, have made her a poor
subject for drama. She is as a result an extremely unsympathetic protagonist.
(Those of us who identify with her journey - I for one - want to leap
through the screen every week lately to shake her and shout "wake up!")
And it's this, more than anything,
that convinces me that her story is modelled on Campbell's Hero's Journey.
Because this season's Buffy has been difficult and frustrating for even
a dedicated fan to watch; and audience numbers are dropping. Only a firm
decision to stick to the model of the hero's journey, even through a protracted
"dark night of the soul", can explain an artistic decision that's losing
the audience. In a medium ruled by Nielsen ratings, the creative risk
taken in deciding to stay with the model nonetheless is truly heroic.
Buffy's story is not, as far
as I can tell, based on a specific Greek heroic myth. It is based, instead
on a THEORY of Greek heroic myth. If Buffy's life plays out as I expect,
it will be the only story so far told which incorporates every element
of Campbell's Hero's Journey. Where the Greeks had a rich oral
tradition as a basis of their work, the Californian film-maker has a theoretical
model. Which one tells the better story likely depends, in the end, more
than anything else on the skill of the individual poet.
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