Buffy in the Classroom
Essays on Teaching with the Vampire Slayer
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About the Book
This book combines the academic and practical aspects of teaching by exploring the ways in which Buffy the Vampire Slayer is taught, internationally, through both interdisciplinary and discipline-based approaches. Essays describe how Buffy can be used to explain—and encourage further discussion of—television’s narrative complexity, archetypal characters, morality, feminism, identity, ethics, non-verbal communication, film production, media and culture, censorship, and Shakespeare, among other topics.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
Edited by Jodie A. Kreider and Meghan K. Winchell
Format: softcover (7 x 10)
Pages: 231
Bibliographic Info: notes, bibliographies, index
Copyright Date: 2010
pISBN: 978-0-7864-5964-3
eISBN: 978-0-7864-6214-8
Imprint: McFarland
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction: “Let’s Have a Lesson Then”
JODIE A. KREIDER and MEGHAN K. WINCHELL 1
To Spoil or Not to Spoil: Teaching Television’s Narrative Complexity
DAVID KOCIEMBA 7
“Have You Tried Not Being a Slayer?” Performing Buffy Fandom in the Classroom
JASON LAWTON WINSLADE 22
And the Myth Becomes Flesh
TANYA R. COCHRAN 35
Round Up the Usable Suspects: Archetypal Characters in the Study of Popular Culture
BARRY MORRIS 46
Heroism on the Hellmouth: Teaching Morality Through Buffy
K. DALE KOONTZ 61
Whedon Takes “the Scary” Out of Feminism
MEGHAN K. WINCHELL 73
Buffy Goes to College: Identity and the Series-Based Seminar Course
ROD ROMESBURG 83
Ethics Homework from the Hellmouth: Buffy Stakes Her Claim in the First-year Composition Classroom
KEITH FUDGE 94
College Isn’t Just Job Training and Parties: Stimulating Critical Thinking with “The Freshman”
MELISSA C. JOHNSON 103
“Can’t Even Shout, Can’t Even Cry” But You Can Learn! Non-Verbal Communication and “Hush”
BRIAN COGAN . 114
“Show, Don’t Tell”: Teaching the Elements of Film Production
JANE MARTIN 126
Television, Violence and Demons: Discussing Media Effects with the Vampire Slayer
ROSIE WHITE 136
Weeding Out the Offensive Material: Beaut y, Beasts, “Gingerbread,” Television, Literature and Censorship
LEITH D ANIEL 146
“Best Damn Field Trip I Ever Took!” Historical Encounters In and Out of the Classroom
JODIE A. KREIDER 158
Little Red Riding … Buffy? “Buff y vs. Dracula” in Explorations of Intertextuality in Introduction to College English
K RISTOPHER KARL WOOFTER 169
Buffy the Black Feminist? Intersectionality and Pedagogy
PATRICK R. GRZANKA 186
Slaying Shakespeare in High School : Buff y Battles The Merchant of Venice and Othello
JULIA L. GRANT 202
About the Contributors 213
Index 215
Book Reviews & Awards
“for secondary school teachers and college professors…illustrated how to use themes from Buffy the Vampire Slayer to teach multiple and interdisciplinary subjects”—Reference & Research Book News.