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The Afterlife of Genre: Remnants of the Trauerspiel in Buffy the Vampire Slayer

By: Adler, Anthony Curtis [author.]Contributor(s): Project Muse [distributor.] | Project Muse [distributor]Material type: TextTextPublisher: Project Muse, Manufacturer: Project MUSE, Description: 1 online resource (60 pages)ISBN: 9780615955742Subject(s): Benjamin, Walter, 1892-1940. Ursprung des deutschen Trauerspiels | Buffy, the vampire slayer (Television program) | Popular culture -- California -- Los Angeles | Television series -- United States -- InfluenceGenre/Form: Electronic books. | Electronic books. Additional physical formats: Print version:: No titleLOC classification: PN1992.77.B84 | A354 2014Online resources: Full text available:
Contents:
The question of genre -- A mourning play without mourning -- Violence and mourning -- The theology of television -- Paradise regained -- The nth degree of afterlife.
Summary: Could there have been television without California? California without television? The one shows the other: the ostentatiously novel singularity of the place and the seemingly self-effacing transparency of the medium. Yet if television and California both promise again and again to offer us something new, young, immaculate in its transience -- a pure surface that will never get caught in the ditch of time -- they are also both haunted through and through: by the itinerant contents of the past that they cannot banish, by memories of the infantile-perverse utopian fantasies that taunt us in constant replay ("If you're going to San Francisco...," "two girls for every guy"), by the contradiction played out in the very gesture of dismissing history and leaving the dead to bury the dead. California and television, as it were, conspire in a vampirologic: the forever-young is what has been there the longest, what really "takes us back." And so we also will take ourselves back: to Buffy the Vampire Slayer, already almost charmingly quaint, and Walter Benjamin's magnum opus The Origin of the German Mourning-Play. What can come of this improbable conjunction? It will not seem too strange that Benjamin, posthumous wanderer across the textures of Americana, should again take up lodging at the Hotel California. But more is at stake than just another hapless visitation from the on high of high theory: reading Buffy as the remediated afterlife of the dead-on-arrival genre of the baroque German mourning play, Adler's book records the first broken, awkward steps toward a project that, with the recent rise of "quality television," seems more urgent than ever before: a political-theological characteristic of the television series.
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PN1992.77.B84 A354 2014 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Link to resource Available
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Issued as part of book collections on Project MUSE.

Includes bibliographical references (pages [61]).

The question of genre -- A mourning play without mourning -- Violence and mourning -- The theology of television -- Paradise regained -- The nth degree of afterlife.

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Could there have been television without California? California without television? The one shows the other: the ostentatiously novel singularity of the place and the seemingly self-effacing transparency of the medium. Yet if television and California both promise again and again to offer us something new, young, immaculate in its transience -- a pure surface that will never get caught in the ditch of time -- they are also both haunted through and through: by the itinerant contents of the past that they cannot banish, by memories of the infantile-perverse utopian fantasies that taunt us in constant replay ("If you're going to San Francisco...," "two girls for every guy"), by the contradiction played out in the very gesture of dismissing history and leaving the dead to bury the dead. California and television, as it were, conspire in a vampirologic: the forever-young is what has been there the longest, what really "takes us back." And so we also will take ourselves back: to Buffy the Vampire Slayer, already almost charmingly quaint, and Walter Benjamin's magnum opus The Origin of the German Mourning-Play. What can come of this improbable conjunction? It will not seem too strange that Benjamin, posthumous wanderer across the textures of Americana, should again take up lodging at the Hotel California. But more is at stake than just another hapless visitation from the on high of high theory: reading Buffy as the remediated afterlife of the dead-on-arrival genre of the baroque German mourning play, Adler's book records the first broken, awkward steps toward a project that, with the recent rise of "quality television," seems more urgent than ever before: a political-theological characteristic of the television series.

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