Buffy in the Classroom: Essays on Teaching with the Vampire SlayerJodie A. Kreider, Meghan K. Winchell McFarland, 10 jan 2014 - 231 pagina's 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. |
Inhoudsopgave
1 | |
To Spoil or Not to Spoil | 7 |
Have You Tried Not Being a Slayer? Performing Buffy Fandom in the Classroom | 22 |
And the Myth Becomes Flesh | 35 |
Round Up the Usable Suspects | 46 |
Heroism on the Hellmouth | 61 |
Whedon Takes the Scary Out of Feminism | 73 |
Buffy Goes to College | 83 |
Show Dont Tell | 126 |
Television Violence and Demons | 136 |
Weeding Out the Offensive Material | 146 |
Best Damn Field Trip I Ever Took Historical Encounters In and Out of the Classroom | 158 |
Little Red Riding Buffy? Buffy vs Dracula in Explorations of Intertextuality in Introduction to College English | 169 |
Buffy the Black Feminist? Intersectionality and Pedagogy | 186 |
Slaying Shakespeare in High School | 202 |
About the Contributors | 213 |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Buffy in the Classroom: Essays on Teaching with the Vampire Slayer Jodie A. Kreider,Meghan K. Winchell Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2010 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
academic analysis Angel archetypes ask students assignments audience Buffy episode Buffy Matters Buffy Studies Buffy Summers Buffy the Vampire Buffy’s Buffyverse cemeteries characters class discussion classroom communication complex Cordelia course critical David Lavery demon Dracula episode essay example experience explore fairy tale fandom female femininity feminism feminist Fighting the Forces film first-year focus Freshman gender girl hero hero’s high school identity instructor intersectionality issues Joss Whedon knowledge learning lesson Marcie monomyth myth n.pag narrative ofBuffy Othello popular culture Print Prophecy Girl quality television questions reading Red Riding Hood responses Rhonda role scene scholars Scooby Gang Season semester seminar sexuality Shylock Slayage social spoilers Stake in Buffy stereotypes story teachers teaching themes topics traditional unit University Vampire Slayer viewers viewing violence watch What’s at Stake Wicca Wilcox and David Willow Willow Rosenberg witchcraft women writing Xander York