elisi: Edwin holding a tiny snowman (Xacula by beer_good_foamy)
elisi ([personal profile] elisi) wrote2010-07-17 07:29 pm

Behold! I have discovered where the idea for s8 came from!

Via this page of Joss Whedon quotes:

It’s better to be a spy in the house of love, you know ? . . . If I made ‘Buffy the Lesbian Separatist,’ a series of lectures on PBS on why there should be feminism, no one would be coming to the party, and it would be boring. The idea of changing culture is important to me, and it can only be done in a popular medium.

On the whole, I'd greatly have preferred the lectures.

ETA: Since I'm here, this vid is very, very good at showing the problematic nature of some of Joss' work:

My Medea by [livejournal.com profile] yunitsa. Many thanks to [livejournal.com profile] rm for helping me find it again.

[identity profile] rm.livejournal.com 2010-07-17 06:32 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't really have a lot of bandwidth for the dude telling us how to do feminism.

[identity profile] rm.livejournal.com 2010-07-17 06:38 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm not that far yet (we've not finished the series, Petty gets home tonight, so soon), but I find it all very troubling. The show does good, especially for when it was created, but it's not perfect (talking about rape: good; obsessing about rape: creepy, fetishizing and reductive) and Whedon spends too much time wanting a cookie.

[identity profile] rm.livejournal.com 2010-07-17 06:43 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm not sure if I've said this to you, but Whedon's work always makes me think of an ex of mine who once said to me in passing, "you know, you're the only woman I've ever slept with who's never been raped" and in one moment it was both very aware of sexual assault, which was awesome and completely creepy and about my inadequateness.

[identity profile] rm.livejournal.com 2010-07-17 06:58 pm (UTC)(link)
Right about the fairytales, but the rest of it is the EXACT same feeling of discomfort for me. Which is really sketchy. And I say this as someone who writes stories about death and sex and violence, pretty much exclusively. And studies them. It's like Whedon doesn't notice the hard on he gets, not from social justice, but from what he's trying to do social justice about. Or, he does, and he's having his guilt in public, I can never figure it out.

[identity profile] penny-lane-42.livejournal.com 2010-07-17 07:02 pm (UTC)(link)
Barging in to say that I love you for this comment. And, honestly, for all your comments in this thread. I completely agree with you about Joss's portrayal of rape.

If you're interested, and you don't mind me self-pimping, I once compiled a list of every instance of questionable consent that my friends and I could think of in the Buffyverse. But it's got lots of spoilers for AtS and for BtVS S8, so you might not want to look at it if you intend to check those out.

[identity profile] rm.livejournal.com 2010-07-17 07:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, seen that vid. I think someone linked to it in [livejournal.com profile] kalichan's journal because she was looking for it.

The fundamental concept of Dollhouse doesn't squick me out, and in fact really itnerests me, but since it was made largely all about women, it turned squicky in a not useful way to my mind. That said, I haven't watched it either ;)

[identity profile] angearia.livejournal.com 2010-07-17 07:12 pm (UTC)(link)
YES. "obessing about rape: creepy, fetishizing and reductive" is exactly it.

Whedon spends too much time wanting a cookie.

Ha!

[identity profile] infinitewhale.livejournal.com 2010-07-17 07:36 pm (UTC)(link)

After his latest work, Whedon really does need to keep his face shut about the topic of feminism. He's either uninformed about what it actually means or his ego is so big he actually thinks he's above the details and he feels he can shape it.

Or both.

His own issues, IMO, cloud his work too much.

[identity profile] eilowyn.livejournal.com 2010-07-17 10:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Little late to the party . . .

On top of his issues with rape and dubcon, there's another side of the coin: the constant reminder that sex is bad, or at least leads to bad things, and the complete lack of long-term, happy relationships. Zoe and Wash used to stand as the sole romantic relationship in the entire Whedonverse that lasted longer than a season or two, but like all Jossian relationships, that, too, ended in tears. The concept of a happy marriage seems absolutely foreign to him (the example of happy marriage I know [livejournal.com profile] penny_lane_42 often uses is President and Mrs. Bartlet from The West Wing; I don't know if that show was very big in England, though), and someone doing biographical criticism could surmise that the divorce of his own parents was the root of this.

Don't really want to speculate on the root of his rape fetish.

[identity profile] angearia.livejournal.com 2010-07-17 10:32 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, I think nobody wants to speculate on that. Which is why it becomes very disturbing that it's so prevalent in all his works.

[identity profile] zanthinegirl.livejournal.com 2010-07-18 12:43 am (UTC)(link)
Suddenly it all makes sooo much sense.

I'd probably have preferred the lectures too. I can't tell you how much I like the idea of Joss being interviewed on PBS.

I have occasionally thought that part of why I much prefer Buffy, the series to Buffy, the comic is that the network provided a check to the worst of his crazyness and/or bad ideas...
Edited 2010-07-18 00:45 (UTC)

[identity profile] jnb71976.livejournal.com 2010-07-18 02:24 am (UTC)(link)
If I made ‘Buffy the Lesbian Separatist,’ a series of lectures on PBS on why there should be feminism, no one would be coming to the party, and it would be boring.

I can't quite pin down why this statement bugs me so much, but it does. Was Joss equating feminist thought with stereotypical slurs against queers? Does he think he has the answer as to why feminism is important? He really thinks he's the one in the know who can show us all? I am befuddled at that level of hubris. It doesn't even seem like he was aware of the privileged way he was speaking. It's a snarky statement, to be sure, but with snark always comes underlying belief. Again, I can't quite pin it down, but I am officially bugged.

It only makes the gaping misogyny in S8 more irritating. If this is Joss' version of mansplaining feminist ideals, he can take his 'Yay, Feminism!' lecture and shove it.

That vid is haunting and sad. I wish there were more of BtVS and AtS in it - of the shadowmen chaining Buffy to the earth, of Giles controlling her power during the cruciamentum, of D'hoffryn and Anya/Halfrek, of Cordy's destruction at Skip's hands, etc. As it is, it is a chilling depiction of Whedon's yen for 'strong' yet broken girls.
silverusagi: (Default)

[personal profile] silverusagi 2010-07-18 05:57 am (UTC)(link)
But yeah, it's the way it was spun, and how (so I understand) the show shows the evils of objectification whilst objectifying...

Yeah, I was saying this the other day. I don't really care about what the show is trying to say, because it seems to be unaware of how skeevy it is itself at times.

[identity profile] jnb71976.livejournal.com 2010-07-18 01:59 pm (UTC)(link)
And now I'm going to go and watch 'Bachelorette' I think...

OH! I immediately thought of 'Bachelorette' when watching that vid! We are of like mind. *high fives*

Actually Dru and Fred would have fitted in better than Buffy - they have that fragile, childlike, (sometime) insanity thing going on too. Also, of course, they're brunettes... Exactly this. You are right on. They would fit perfectly with River and Echo. Dark-haired women who appear physically frail and have been tortured in some way, but are ultimately strong willed, yet get crushed anyways. What IS that with Joss' work? I mean, jeez!