
Appendix A:
The Slayer's Journey: Buffy Summers and the Hero's Life
by: Rattletrap
posted on Sat, 01/25/03 at 19:20:31
Joseph
Campbell's 1949 book, The Hero with a Thousand Faces, identifies common
strains in the mythology of all world religions and cultures. Campbell concludes
that all are different and varied manifestations of one "monomyth,"
a universal story with roots in the universal human experience. One key component
of Campbell's analysis is the recurring hero's journey that appears at the heart
of most stories. The hero always passes through several phases in his quest;
regular stages that Campbell identifies and defines. Modern writers such as
Christopher Vogler, author of The Writer's Journey, have recognized
the value of Campbell's scholarship in the creation of modern popular stories
on film, in novels, and on the small screen that is our concern here. Buffy
the Vampire Slayer is deeply resonant with its audience, in part because
it is a modern retelling of the timeless journey of the hero; a journey that
parallels our own individual life journeys. At the same time, the monomyth is
updated to reflect some of the realities of life in the postmodern world.
Campbell divides the hero's journey into three phases: Separation,
Initiation, and Return. I will borrow his
terminology regularly during this essay, though I have also borrowed indiscriminately
from Vogler's book and other sources. In brief, the Hero is offered a call to
adventure during the Separation phase, and, after several refusals,
she accepts. The period of Initiation is the bulk of the story,
in which the Hero faces a series of increasingly difficult challenges, both
outer and inner. Finally the Hero experiences a literal or metaphorical death
and resurrection and begins the long road back-this is the Return
phase. Many scholars have noted that the heroine's journey differs slightly
from the hero's. The female journey tends to be spiraling or cyclical, rather
than linear or curving in one large, gradual circle as does the journey of the
male protagonist. This generalization also holds true for Buffy. Each
episode contains within itself a small hero's journey. Each season contains
a longer adaptation of the journey. The entire series is also its own journey,
which will be the focus of this essay. Finally, each of the main characters
struggles through her or his journey that intersects the larger story at many
points along the way. Please bear in mind that the hero's journey is not a hard
and fast law of writing, but a form that generally appears, with an almost infinite
number of variations. This analysis is open to other interpretations, most of
which are not mutually exclusive.
Separation
and the Call to Adventure
(Season 1)
The
opening moments of Welcome to the Hellmouth set the stage for the entire
series. An establishing shot shows us Sunnydale High School after dark, and
we are transported inside to find a young man and a young woman breaking and
entering, ostensibly for a make-out session. While this sequence is, in many
respects, a horror movie cliché, Joss Whedon turns it on its head almost
immediately when the young woman, vampire Darla, devours the unnamed young man.
This prologue foreshadows many of the elements that become commonplace in Buffy
over the next several years-juxtaposition of ordinary with fantastic (e.g. high
schools and vampires); repeated use of clichés from movies and television,
but with some modification; and, perhaps most importantly, a role reversal with
a dominant, female heroine.
Returning after the credits takes us to the World of Common Day (or the Ordinary
World). This is Sunnydale High School during the daytime on a regular class
day. This sequence serves several purposes. First, it introduces our dramatis
personae-we meet most of the characters who will become allies and nemises
over the next several years. The scene also establishes the basic geography
of Sunnydale, a one-Starbucks town roughly 2 hours on the freeway from LA's
shopping district, and gives us a glimpse of the social hierarchy that defines
SHS. Also, several conversations during the first few scenes of Welcome
to the Hellmouth, give us the background on our heroine-sixteen year-old
Buffy Anne Summers, kicked out of Hemery High School in Los Angeles after burning
down the gym. Whedon establishes Buffy as a damaged heroine from the outset-one
who has traveled the hero's road and returned ladened with cynicism and battle
scars, and with no desire to set out along the road again.
The opening sequence in SHS also issues the first Call to Adventure.
Buffy enters the library for the first time. The soundtrack subtly shifts, eliminating
the background noise of the halls for the quiet silence of the library and cueing
us in that this is special space, terrain on the edge of the Ordinary World.
Buffy meets with Giles, who will function as her Mentor figure for most of her
journey. In this instance Giles also functions as a herald, offering Buffy her
first Call to Adventure. Our heroine, weighed down by her expulsion from one
school and the loss of her friends and her social status, bluntly refuses. The
discovery of the dead body later in the day prompts Buffy to return to the library,
where Giles issues a second Call, which Buffy again refuses.
Despite Buffy's persistent refusal to accept her destiny, forces beyond her
control push her out on the road. The seemingly innocuous decision to go to
a club that evening takes her to the Threshold of Adventure.
She meets with another Herald figure in Angel, who appears only as a tall, dark,
handsome stranger; but of whose character we know nothing. Buffy again refuses
the call, but, in the time-honored tradition of Heralds on the Hero's
road, Angel leaves her with a parting gift, a small silver cross necklace.
In The Writer's Journey, Vogler notes that the transitional point on
the Threshold is often a bar or watering hole of some type. Buffy is
no exception. The dark, noisy, crowded world of the Bronze contrasts with the
daylight world of classes at SHS. The conditions make it a perfect hunting ground
for vampires, reinforcing the show's juxtaposition of mundane and mythical elements.
Here Buffy is given the call she can no longer refuse. Willow, one of Buffy's
very few friends at this point, is abducted while acting on Buffy's advice to
seize the moment, because life is short. Feelings of responsibility toward her
friend finally force the reluctant Hero into her journey. Before the journey
can begin, however, Buffy must confront another archetype along the road. She
encounters Cordelia and the Cordettes outside the bathroom in the Bronze and
is confronted with a decision: rescue Willow and sacrifice her social status
or ignore her calling and embrace the normal life of a high school student.
Cordelia, in this context, represents the Guardian of the Threshold,
a figure that stands in the way of the Hero's passage, but is not necessarily
a malevolent figure.
Buffy successfully rescues Willow and stops the Harvest from occurring. This
places her on the road of the Hero's journey, but the stage of Separation is
not yet complete. In keeping with the mythological tradition, the Hero must
find allies and prepare for the journey before completely leaving the World
of Common Day behind. The remainder of Season 1 consists of just such a process.
The Scooby Gang first begins to function as a unit in episode 1.3, The Witch.
This episode also establishes the formula for the remainder of Season 1. A catalyst
event, such as the discovery of a body at Sunnydale High (a staple of the series)
pushes the gang into action, the gang goes to the library to do research, and
based on the new knowledge gained confronts the baddie. While Season 1, like
all Buffy seasons, had its big bad, the Master did not figure prominently
in most of the episodes, and did not directly confront Buffy until the season's
final episode. This season focused more on the "High School is
Hell" metaphor that defined the early years of the series and
on the emerging relationships in the Scooby Gang.
The characters that appear in the Scooby Gang are also important archetypes
in the Hero's Journey, because sidekicks, too, serve an important function in
literature, TV, and film. Like many Heroes, Buffy finds herself accompanied
by people of a lower social status-Don Quixote's companion Sancho Panza and
Frodo's servant Sam are both literary examples of this phenomenon. Buffy refuses
to shun Willow and Xander despite their lower status in the SHS social structure,
and they wind up as her most loyal supporters on the Hero's path. Xander, especially,
embodies a common archetype in literature-the comic
sidekick and the boy who refuses to grow up. He represents the funny,
playful side of the Hero and reminds us never to take any calling too seriously.
Angel, too, fulfills a specific function on the journey. His character appears
sporadically through the early part of Season 1, usually warning of some impending
doom and then vanishing back into the woodwork. In episode 1.7, Angel,
he is revealed to be a vampire, but one with a soul fighting on the side of
good. Vampires are a common embodiment of a form that Campbell refers to as
the Shapeshifter, an ambiguous character whose intentions are
never entirely clear and may appear as either an ally, an enemy, or swing back
and forth between the two. Angel's human appearance, demonic nature, and gypsy-restored
soul make him a near perfect embodiment of this archetype.
Cordelia, as I have already suggested, fulfills the role of Threshold
Guardian, an obstacle that must be overcome before the Hero can set
out on her path. On BtVS, Cordelia serves as the symbolic reminder
of the life that Buffy has forsaken. Threshold Guardians are rarely enemies
to be defeated; instead the Hero must often co-opt or assimilate them as part
of the group. Buffy does just this. She saves Cordelia's life several times
during the first season, and by the end of that season, Cordelia can no longer
deny Buffy's ability. In the season's penultimate episode, (1.11) Out of
Mind, Out of Sight, Cordelia is threatened by invisible girl Marcie and
solicits Buffy's protection. Her once adversarial character comes to a mutual
toleration, if not respect for, the Scooby Gang.
By the end of Season 1, then, Buffy is ready to set out on her Hero's Journey,
to complete the process of separation and leave the World of Common Day. In
the final episode of Season 1, Prophecy Girl, Buffy makes a willing
decision to accept her calling and face the Master, even knowing that it will
mean her own death. Buffy's death, in the larger scope of the
series, is not the death and resurrection experience that the Hero must experience.
It represents, instead, the crossing of the threshold
and the willing acceptance of the Slayer's calling and all of the risks and
consequences contained therein. While Buffy regularly relapses and
longs for the life of a normal girl, subsequent episodes suggest that she never
seriously considers abandoning the slayer's journey.
Initiation
(Seasons 2, 3, and 4)
In Campbell's
structure, most of the Hero's Journey occurs within the phase known as Initiation.
During this phase, the Hero faces a series of tests or ordeals, each usually
more intense than the last, building toward one final crisis. Seasons 2 through
5 of Buffy carry our heroine on just such a journey. The early episodes
of Season 2 appear to roughly mimic the pattern of Season 1, but serve increasingly
to remind our characters of the darkness within each of them and the dangers
of the Hero's road. This season, perhaps more than any other, is emblematic
of the Hero's inward journey. The Dark Age shows us
the Campbellian archetype of the Shadow. Rarely cast as a person,
the Shadow instead embodies the ever present darkness within each of us. Giles,
once the stable, reliable Mentor is revealed to be a one-time practitioner of
the black arts. What's My Line introduces Kendra, the Vampire slayer,
called at the moment of Buffy's death and serving as a subtle reminder of the
dangers the journey poses to the Hero.
The second season takes its most severe turn with the Surprise/Innocence
two-part episode. Angel, already a Shapeshifter, reverts to his evil nature
after knowing a moment of true happiness during a night of sex with Buffy and
begins terrorizing her and the Scooby Gang. In so doing, he becomes the homme
fatale, a common archetype in literature and film. Campbell's
Hero often must face a lover that turns to an enemy (or vice versa) on the Journey.
Angel's turn to evil drives Buffy into a period of intense self-examination
during the end of Season 2, culminating in the stirring metaphor of I Only
Have Eyes for You, during which she finally accepts what has happened and
what she has to do to fix it. In that season's finale, Becoming (2.21,
2.22), Buffy is driven away from home, expelled from school, and forced to send
a resouled Angel to hell. The final shot of the episode shows her riding a bus
out of Sunnydale for parts unknown, unable to stand the emotional strain of
the journey.
Season 2, then, might be summarized as a period of internal focus. That season's
big bad originated from within the group and forced the Hero to draw on her
deepest emotional reserves to survive the journey. The first several episodes
of the following season explore Buffy's attempts to make peace with her mother,
her friends, and her past; all key components in the hero's journey. Again,
we are reminded of the Hero's own internal darkness by the arrival of Faith,
a character embodying the archetypes of Shadow and Shapeshifter,
and showing us what direction Buffy might have gone with only a slightly different
course of events. This continued inward journey is only a part of the larger
movement through the Hero's ever-expanding special world.
In keeping with Campbell's form the next stage of the journey takes her toward
a broader, more external focus, one that includes the entire town and the people
she protects. In Season 3's main story arc, Sunnydale's immortal mayor, Richard
Wilkins III, has built the town for demons to feed on in preparation for his
own ascension. The Mayor embodies yet another common archetype. Campbell's Hero
must often face and defeat a powerful father-like figure. The
Mutant Enemy writing staff especially emphasized this facet of the Mayor's personality
with his peculiarly gentle paternal relationship to Faith. It is doubly fitting,
then, that the Mayor's transformation into the demon Olvikan should cause him
to become a giant snake, an ironically fitting phallic symbol that further emphasizes
his status as the father figure.
Season 3 is also fairly unique among Buffy seasons in that it ends
on a positive note with few unanswered questions, offering our group a brief
respite before the next stage of their journey. Season 4 expands the Hero's
special world even farther. The narrow constraints of high school class and
living at home give way to the more open intellectual and individual freedom
of the college campus. This greater freedom also leaves the Scooby Gang more
disoriented than they have ever been, each more isolated and weighed down with
her or his individual problems and less focused on the journey at hand. The
process of reorganization and redefinition midway through the story is integral
to the journey.
That season's big bad is not revealed until fairly late in the season. Ultimately,
however, his story is only part of the ever expanding world view of the Hero.
The main adversary for most of the season is the mysterious, government operated
"Initiative," operating clandestinely from beneath one of the dorms
and suggesting that activities in Sunnydale have moved beyond the concern of
local authorities and attracted the attention of national ones. Frequently along
the Hero's Journey, a perceived threat turns out to be a competitor, but one
that shares a common goal. Such is the case with the Initiative. Both the Initiative
soldiers and the Scooby Gang share a common interest in demon hunting, but they
differ wildly on methods and ultimate objectives. Buffy is able to work alongside
the Initiative for a while, but finds her view of the calling remarkably different
from theirs.
The
initiative produces the monstrous Adam that becomes the main antagonist of the
season, but his plan is not fully revealed until episode 4.20, The Yoko
Factor. The Scooby Gang unites to defeat him in (4.21) Primeval,
and is forced to summon the power of the first slayer to do so. This act forces
them to tap forces more powerful than anything they have used before, as each
stage of the journey grows progressively more difficult.
Season 4 also ends on an unconventional note, but one critical for the journey.
Vogler notes that the stage before the final ascent often entails a brief interlude,
often the Hero and allies gathering around a campfire to share stories. Buffy
and the Scooby Gang instead settle into a nice evening of movie-watching in
the Summers living room, perhaps the modern-day equivalent of a campfire. The
dreams they share reinforce their unity and set the stage for the final stage
of the Initiation.
(Season 5)
After years of struggle, the Hero survives her ordeal and prepares to face one final, ultimate conflict, the climax of her journey. Before she can do that, however, she is given a reward, something powerful that offers some pay off for the struggle to this point and foreshadows greater rewards ahead should the journey be completed. Our heroine receives a new lease on life for the fifth season. The dream encounters with the first slayer during (4.22) Restless, leave Buffy curious about the deeper source of her power and longing to explore the slayer's true nature. That internal reward is paralleled by the external reward in the arrival of the slayer's mystically created younger sister Dawn-literally the creation of a new life in the middle of the journey.
Season 5
also continues the Hero's steadily expanding worldview. Season 2 dealt with
internal demons, Season 3 with local ones, and Season 4 with national ones.
The only thing larger could be a confrontation with a god. If Season 3 was embodied
by conflict with a father figure, then Season 5's big bad is the embodiment
of a mother figure-a goddess known as Glory-created by Joss Whedon and his writers,
but recalling the countless spoiled, arrogant, and evil goddesses of ancient
mythology. Here Mutant Enemy places a curious twist on the traditional Hero's
Journey. Campbell's Hero must always face a goddess or a maternal figure (one
symbolic of the feminine aspect of Self, just as the father figure symbolizes
the masculine aspect), but that figure traditionally appears fairly early in
the journey. The father figure traditionally arrives much later, usually in
connection with the Hero's ultimate conflict. The reversal
of roles in BtVS that has become the hallmark of the show continues even into
the structure of the Hero's journey. A woman is the great Hero; therefore a
woman must also be the great enemy.
Midway through Season 5, our Hero faces another experience common on the Hero's
journey-the reversal of fortune. The early episodes show Buffy getting stronger
as a slayer and more focused on her journey. Her mother struggles with, but
apparently defeats a brain tumor. On the evening after her successful surgery,
however, the conflicts long suppressed in Buffy's relationship with Riley come
to a head, culminating in Riley's departure on a helicopter for demon fighting
in the jungles of Central America. From that point, Buffy's fortunes begin a
downward spiral. Two months later, she discovers her mother's lifeless body,
dead from complications from the surgery. Buffy is forced to take on the duty
of caring for an increasingly rebellious Dawn in addition to her already formidable
slayer workload. What began as a new lease on life at the beginning of the season
spirals out of control into an almost unbearable burden. Glory's captureof Dawn
at the end of (5.20) Spiral drives Buffy into a catatonic state.
Buffy is pulled out of her catatonia only by Willow's intervention. This, too,
is a common occurrence along the Journey. The Hero frequently finds himself
inadequate to the task and must rely on the special skills of his allies to
confront the final challenge. Buffy realizes that she, alone, simply cannot
win; but with the aid of her "big gun" Willow, Xander's skills as
a construction worker and bowling virtuoso, and Spike's fighting prowess they
might have a chance. Ultimately, however, the Hero is still required to perform
above and beyond.
The apocalyptic battle of (5.22) The Gift culminates with Buffy's sacrificial
death in Dawn's place. The passage through death and resurrection/rebirth
ushers in the final stage of the Hero's journey, the Return. All Heroes experience
some sort of death and resurrection-sometimes a literal death as in Buffy's
case, in others a journey to the land of the dead as Odysseus performed, in
others an apparent death later revealed to be false (e.g. Frodo in Shelob's
lair), in still others a symbolic or metaphorical death.
Return
(Season 6)
The Return
stage of the Hero's journey deals with the Hero's reintegration into the Ordinary
World. Buffy's return embodies the common theme of the reluctant or refused
return. In her death, she finds peace and fulfillment only to have that tragically
destroyed by her forced return into the World of Common Day,
a world in which the common day is so bright and violent it seems like hell.
Campbell notes that heroes often become so accustomed to life on the journey
that they do not smoothly reintegrate into their Ordinary World. This, so far,
has been the theme of Season 6. It is instructive to note that the writers have
not tried to come up with a bigger or badder antagonist, but rather an inconsequential
group of stooges that slide in below the radar and annoy Buffy more than they
threaten her. The real story of this season deals with Buffy's reintegration
into the Ordinary World-the assumption of the mundane tasks that characterize
all of our lives, such as bill paying, home repair, and working-and finding
the balance between those tasks and the special calling of the Hero.
Frequently, the Hero is required to return home and restore order or set things
to right (Odysseus, Frodo, etc.). The slayer's ordinary world in Season 6 is
badly in need of such reordering with her long-time allies more alienated and
alone than ever, each drowning in their own difficulties. We can safely assume
Buffy will again rise to the occasion, but when and how remain to be seen.