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superplin's old
postI loved Buffy through the earlier seasons and admired her and thought she was great, but I never loved her more than in late season 5 and season 6, when she was depressed and downtrodden and angry. I loved her most when she was overwhelmed by the world, when she was thisclose to the breaking point, and when she sometimes
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This defence was offered by Spike, who has some valid points, but he is not necessarily a voice of The Only Truth. Buffy herself feels sorry for Wood - having to grow up without a mother, but not because of her military mindset, I think, but because Nikki was the Slayer - as Buffy is, the Slayer life expectancy is quite short, and Buffy already died twice, she knows the stakes better than anybody else; so it is not a military mindset, it is an acceptance of what comes from being the Slayer. Of course, Buffy at the moment is not in the best emotional place, either.
And Get it Done really disturbs me because I used to think Slayer Power was a positive. A metaphor for Buffy's imaginative, emotional and intellectual power. And now we learn it is the ultimate act of victimisation, a metaphor for an attempted rape of Buffy, an echo of a successful one.
But slayer power has never been portrayed only positive, or only negative. It was a complicated knot of freedom, limits, fun, and responsibilities, and the fact they were given against the will, added complications, not coloured everything black for me.
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