All the older women in BtVS are not an example and, if they are, they are a bad example (Maggie) but I guess it's more about generations than genders. Older generations are represented by Joyce, but also by Giles and all the Council members (And maybe by vampires too. Spike and Angel are pretty old and they show it at times) while the younger generation is the one that matters (Willow, Buffy, Dawn, Xander etc) I think it's more about generations. Or at least, that's my first impression.
Joyce doesn't look good in Gingerbread, but I LOVE that episode. Especially because it's so true. The error of all these women was to judge and take a stand against something they really didn't understand. Joyce is tricked by the creepy children but the others are becoming the medieval inquisition without no basis and without real desire to understand and how many times that happens in RL? Against immigrants, gay, atheist or whatever. There's always someone who has to "protect" society from the evil bad different people. And while Joyce is tricked, Sheila is just superficial and pompous, the Mayor *knows* all the time and he uses this thing to take personal advantage.
The thing about Joyce - and generally women - having to be private, just strikes me in the comics, because of the all Twangel - "I'm taking back everything I did in seven seasons" - plot. And it doesn't feel good.
I think you have a very good point about the generational aspect and that's true - (apparently Joss has parental issues). But in this instance gender and age definitely intersect (plus race in the cases of Jenny and Olivia.) There are a multiplicity of "Fathers", father-figures especially in terms of their effects on Buffy or on the Slayers generally. The WC is a patriarcial institution and we only see a couple of female watchers; Gwendolyn is entirely evil. There's Giles, Angel, Hank.
But only one literal "mother" - Joyce. There are symbolic mother figures (Buffy, Tara) but every mother figure in the verse that I know of except Buffy and Drusilla are dead by the end of btvs or ats.
I suppose the lack of female figures to be role models/guides for Buffy is supposed to be part of the point but even in very "conservative" societies women have complex social bonds and interrelationships. The show repeats the pattern of society generally which is the erasure of mature women, specifically. It's particularly notable because there is already such a lack of representation of mature women in films etc in the US although that has gotten a lot better in the last 20 years esp in terms of television (older actresses finding quality work in tv when movies are no longer being written for them).
We really don't lack for representations of mature men OTOH when Sean Connery and Harrison Ford can still play romantic or action leads in big-budget films, paired with women young enough to be their daughters.
Joyce is tricked by the creepy children but the others are becoming the medieval inquisition without no basis
I'm pretty sure the same spell affected everyone, but I'd have to watch the ep to be sure of that. I think there are definitely good things about the ep and that "gang mentality" is very real. Buffy is often a stand-in for gays in lesbians esp in S1-2 ("in the closet") but Gingerbread reminds me of parents who have found out their child is gay and love their children but are not at all comfortable with their child's identity, so they look for something/one to "blame". That there is something evil there.
Or even anti-gay protestors who blame the latest hurricane or whatever on homosexuals. It's crazy but there are crazy people out there and yes, they can be destructive.
So as with the Slayer spell, there's good and bad to that episode but that is so true of the series generally.
I like the connection the episode makes between Buffy and Willow, and Joan of Arc. (And poor Amy.)
because of the all Twangel - "I'm taking back everything I did in seven seasons" - plot. And it doesn't feel good.
My first reaction, after WHAT THE HELL? was ok, so were you kidding then or are you kidding now, Joss? I can see both sides of the issue with Chosen, I can see no good from S8. I have tried and tried and squinted and stood on my head but - no.
There are symbolic mother figures (Buffy, Tara) but every mother figure in the verse that I know of except Buffy and Drusilla are dead by the end of btvs or ats.
Interesting. So do you at Drusilla as mother figure? I've never seen her like that. (To me she's a daughter figure and a very disturbing one.)
Buffy is a mother figure herself, true, and Joyce dies (and she doesn't seem really connected in the first seasons, when she doesn't know about the slayer-thingy) But I really think it's more about age than gender - in this case, because in general movies it's also about gender - because all the father figures in BtVS pretty much ... suck. Xander's father is terrible, Hank's absent and Willow's dad doesn't seem to exist. Plus we get Angelus and the Master who are, at least to me, the creepiest father figures EVER. Even Giles makes some serious mistakes and he's the father figure for Buffy but not much for Xander or Dawn. I really think it's a general bad view of parental figures. (But I TOTALLY agree with the issue about race. Seriously: Kendra, Jenny, Nikki ... all the people who aren't white are also disposable)
Gingerbread makes me think also about politics. Not only the persecution against homosexual which - in my country - is still a huge problem, but also the politics against immigrants and other parts of the country and different people in general. If you happen to read or see something about the latest developments in Italian politics you could see ... a disturbing analogy? So, yes, it feels so real.
no subject
Date: 2014-02-20 12:25 pm (UTC)Joyce doesn't look good in Gingerbread, but I LOVE that episode. Especially because it's so true. The error of all these women was to judge and take a stand against something they really didn't understand. Joyce is tricked by the creepy children but the others are becoming the medieval inquisition without no basis and without real desire to understand and how many times that happens in RL? Against immigrants, gay, atheist or whatever. There's always someone who has to "protect" society from the evil bad different people. And while Joyce is tricked, Sheila is just superficial and pompous, the Mayor *knows* all the time and he uses this thing to take personal advantage.
The thing about Joyce - and generally women - having to be private, just strikes me in the comics, because of the all Twangel - "I'm taking back everything I did in seven seasons" - plot. And it doesn't feel good.
no subject
Date: 2014-02-20 11:20 pm (UTC)But only one literal "mother" - Joyce. There are symbolic mother figures (Buffy, Tara) but every mother figure in the verse that I know of except Buffy and Drusilla are dead by the end of btvs or ats.
I suppose the lack of female figures to be role models/guides for Buffy is supposed to be part of the point but even in very "conservative" societies women have complex social bonds and interrelationships. The show repeats the pattern of society generally which is the erasure of mature women, specifically. It's particularly notable because there is already such a lack of representation of mature women in films etc in the US although that has gotten a lot better in the last 20 years esp in terms of television (older actresses finding quality work in tv when movies are no longer being written for them).
We really don't lack for representations of mature men OTOH when Sean Connery and Harrison Ford can still play romantic or action leads in big-budget films, paired with women young enough to be their daughters.
Joyce is tricked by the creepy children but the others are becoming the medieval inquisition without no basis
I'm pretty sure the same spell affected everyone, but I'd have to watch the ep to be sure of that. I think there are definitely good things about the ep and that "gang mentality" is very real. Buffy is often a stand-in for gays in lesbians esp in S1-2 ("in the closet") but Gingerbread reminds me of parents who have found out their child is gay and love their children but are not at all comfortable with their child's identity, so they look for something/one to "blame". That there is something evil there.
Or even anti-gay protestors who blame the latest hurricane or whatever on homosexuals. It's crazy but there are crazy people out there and yes, they can be destructive.
So as with the Slayer spell, there's good and bad to that episode but that is so true of the series generally.
I like the connection the episode makes between Buffy and Willow, and Joan of Arc. (And poor Amy.)
because of the all Twangel - "I'm taking back everything I did in seven seasons" - plot. And it doesn't feel good.
My first reaction, after WHAT THE HELL? was ok, so were you kidding then or are you kidding now, Joss? I can see both sides of the issue with Chosen, I can see no good from S8. I have tried and tried and squinted and stood on my head but - no.
no subject
Date: 2014-02-21 12:44 pm (UTC)Interesting. So do you at Drusilla as mother figure? I've never seen her like that. (To me she's a daughter figure and a very disturbing one.)
Buffy is a mother figure herself, true, and Joyce dies (and she doesn't seem really connected in the first seasons, when she doesn't know about the slayer-thingy) But I really think it's more about age than gender - in this case, because in general movies it's also about gender - because all the father figures in BtVS pretty much ... suck. Xander's father is terrible, Hank's absent and Willow's dad doesn't seem to exist. Plus we get Angelus and the Master who are, at least to me, the creepiest father figures EVER. Even Giles makes some serious mistakes and he's the father figure for Buffy but not much for Xander or Dawn. I really think it's a general bad view of parental figures. (But I TOTALLY agree with the issue about race. Seriously: Kendra, Jenny, Nikki ... all the people who aren't white are also disposable)
Gingerbread makes me think also about politics. Not only the persecution against homosexual which - in my country - is still a huge problem, but also the politics against immigrants and other parts of the country and different people in general. If you happen to read or see something about the latest developments in Italian politics you could see ... a disturbing analogy?
So, yes, it feels so real.