Topics Related To Internet Use To Use For An Argumentative Synthesis Essay
Tuesday, January 21, 2020
Something to Sing About in Buffy the Vampire Slayer Essay -- Buffy the
à  Ã  Ã   Throughout much of recorded  human history, people have written tales of the dead returning to life, usually  to trouble the living in some way. These traditional myths have progressed from  ancient superstitions, to campfire ghost stories, to television shows such as  Joss Whedon's Buffy the Vampire Slayer. In the series, vampires are created from  the dead victims of other vampires (as long as a certain rite is performed  during the victim's death). After a time they rise from their graves and  immediately seek to kill and drink the blood of the living. Creatures such as  these are, as Lacan [give first name when you first mention someone] describes  them, "between the two deaths" and live again only to fulfill insistent,  mechanical drive. This drive, often centered on killing, vengeance, or some  other quest for closure, is distinct from desire in that it is not "caught up in  dialectical trickery" (Zizek 21). According to Zizek [ditto], normal desires are  not alway   s what they seem, for when we desire something, we may be seeking  something else entirely (21). Most of the vampires in Buffy the Vampire Slayer  fit Lacan's profile of between the two deaths, and, as one might expect, they  are antagonists to the protector of the living, Buffy. However, in the musical  episode "Once More, with Feeling," Whedon explores two protagonists who are also  between the two deaths, each struggling to revert back to their prior state of  being, but both in a different situation. One of these characters, Spike, once  fit the archetype of the vampire, but now faces difficulty as he is forced to  cope with normal dialectical desire in order to exist in the civilized, symbolic  world. The other, Buffy, fulfilled the death drive when she sa...              ... her to be the Slayer. Her only  chance to find motivation in the world is to find a new desire. Both characters  approach the same center, but from different ends of the drive-symbol spectrum.  Thus, Whedon not only makes use of the Lacanian "between the two deaths"  concept, but he also plays with making it dynamic (Spike) and with inverting it  (Buffy). Then, at the very end of the episode, the two experiments are united in  an elegant closure.     à       Sources Cited or Consulted     Buffy the Vampire Slayer. "Once More, with Feeling."     Felluga, Dino. "Modules on Lacan: On Desire." Introductory Guide to Critical  Theory. Date March 11, 2003. Purdue U. March 23, 2003.  <http://www.purdue.edu/guidetotheory/psychoanalysis/lacandesire.html>.     Zizek, Slavoj. Looking Awry: An Introduction to Jacques Lacan through Popular  Culture. Cambridge: MIT P, 1991.                          
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