In the Beginning: Themes of Season Four:
Or how there were a lot of good ideas to begin with that weren't too well executed
Etrangere
- June 11 2002
Thanks to Lady Starlight and Wise Woman for correcting the
translation mistakes and general copy editing.
I remember having read an explanation of the name of the Initiative based on
the irony to apply such a word to people that didn't know much but who simply
followed orders. I propose another one: Initiative comes from initiare, the Latin
for "to begin." That word of beginning is the one that starts a well known book and gave
its name, in the Hebraic tradition, to the first chapter of this book,
Bereshith, or in English, Genesis. A Season Big Bad isn't named Adam by
coincidence.
One of the problems with the way the story arc of season 4 worked is that
there was too few episodes about it. In every other seasons (except S1) there's
a dozen episodes more or less directly about the Story Arc and its Big Bad.
Season 4 has only 5: The Initiative, The I in Team, Goodbye Iowa, the Yoko
Factor and Primeval. Plus Restless, somehow. So we have to check on the other
episodes too. Usually, even if they're not about the Story Arc directly, the
other episodes support it thematically. (For example in S2, a dozen episodes
deal with a boy- or girlfriend being a danger for their date, or people whose
dark side is discovered)
By analyzing the themes of each individual episode of S4 and their title,
we've got three principal themes that appear clearly:
1. A act of creating / naming a new humanity
2. A state of primordial wilderness, amoral and happily ignorant
3. A rupture with this state brought by an awakening to conscience
One of the rules of fairy tales are that we find, at a smaller scale, the
same story told several times that is the story of the whole fairy tale. And the
story that tells Season 4 is very clearly the one of the creation of man and its
expulsion from the garden of Eden for the discovery of Good and Evil. The
crucial point of that Season and of this theme (like Innocence was for Season 2)
is Goodbye Iowa.
I - To Create the Human, to Name the Man
If we have a look at the titles and themes of the episodes, we find a handful
of them dealing with the idea of renewal of Man. The Freshman, A New Man, This
Year's Girl, and even Who Are You, Living Condition, Superstar, New Moon Rising.
The Initiative is at the source of the creation, or the recreation, of three
important characters from this season: Adam, Riley and Spike (Five if you count
Forrest and Graham, but they have probably more value as Riley's doubles). The
evolution of these three characters is contrasted, one against the other(s) all
along the Season, sometimes in parallel, sometimes in opposition.
The similarities are quite clear between Adam and Riley, Professor Walsh's
two "babies". During the first confrontation between those two characters, Adam
says to Riley: "But after you met Maggie, she was the one who shaped your basic
operating system. She taught you how to think. How to feel. She fed you
chemicals to make you stronger. Your mind and body. She said that you and I were
her favorite children. Her art. That makes us brothers. Family." (Goodbye Iowa)
This helps us to Define what it is that creates man: to form someone, his mind,
his body, his feelings. It's not only about makes him exist, but to determine
his way of dealing with existence, the terms of one's interaction with one's
life.
Spike being an almost accidental result of the Initiative, his case is more
ambiguous. The Initiative probably didn't mean to keep him alive very long, and
it's only because of his evasion that his re-creation was really made. (Spike is
probably too much of a self-made-man to let himself be remake without a word:)
But Initiative's intervention by implanting him the chip is still enough to
force him to redefine what he is and to change totally his behavior. We do see
him put in parallel with Riley first in The Initiative, Something Blue, Doomed
and Goodbye Iowa, then with his alliance to Adam in the Season ending. Restless
puts him back in parallel with Riley.
The last case of human recreation in Season 4 is Faith, through the
double-episode This Year's Girl / Who Are You. She is even symbolically reborn
for the occasion, coming out from a grave in the dream before her awakening.
Of course it concerns also, at least a little, the heart of the Scooby Gang;
who through their first year in College have the occasion to reinvent
themselves, to redefine their identities, their role in the life they look
forward to, this definition leading them to the dispersion that marks their
relationship in the Season. But as it this has already been analyzed, I tried to
see where else it applied. So what does characterize the action to make Man?
Keeping in mind what Adam said, I think it is the idea of definition, hence of
name.
Genesis describes the creation through word, God says, and bam, so it is.
BUFFY: She pieced you together from parts of other demons.
ADAM: And man. And machine. Which tells me what I am. . but not who I am.
(Goodbye Iowa)
Giving a name to something, it means giving its origin, its role, it
singularity. It's giving it a function. (Remember Anne: "I'm Buffy the Vampire
Slayer, and you are?") Paradoxically it's from the mouth of a child, once out of
the Initiative, that Adam discovered the answer to this question: "You're a
monster." Yet he seems indeed to refer to Walsh's plans and to try to follow
them: "Mother wrote things down. Hard data, but also her feelings. That's how I
learned that I have a job here. And that she loved me." And this is more
important about what is Adam than what he is made of.
This idea of name comes back, in a way that struck me in Restless: "RILEY:
Buffy, we've got important work here. A lot of filing, giving things names."
That's probably a reference to the moment when Adam gives name to every animal
of the creation. By doing this, he removes a part of the wilderness, of the
unknown intrinsic that is a part of them. In short, he gains control over them.
"RILEY: Baby, we're the government. It's what we do." Names give control:
remove the speech from a town, and it falls in anarchy. But it's also a
restriction of possibilities: "WALSH: So this is what it is.. talking about
communication talking about language... not the same thing. It's about
inspiration... Not the idea, but the moment before the idea when it's total.
When it blossoms in your mind and connects to everything. It's about the
thoughts and experiences that we don't have a word for." (Hush)
Freed from words, the couples of Anya / Xander, Buffy / Riley and Tara /
Willow are able to communicate more easily than with them. And in Fear, Itself,
the fears once named, identified, taken in the light, do not seem so threatening
anymore.
Changing one's name, is it changing one's being? Can you be freed from
what you are by changing your identity? That's the question of Who Are You.
Playing Buffy's role seems indeed to allow Faith to reinvent herself, but
Sanctuary proves one can not escape to the consequences of one's identity.
As for the First Slayer, she has not even a name ("TARA: I have no speech. No
name.") and Buffy shows how much it's a limit. The answer is probably somewhere
in a balance between the freedom of the absence of name, and the
responsibilities that goes with the power that gives the name.
II - The Garden of Eden: an Amoral Paradise
According to Maggie, "These are the things we want - simple things. Comfort,
sex, shelter, food. We always want them and we want them all the time. Id
doesn't learn. Id doesn't grow up. It has the ego telling it what it can't have,
and it has the super-ego telling it what it shouldn't want, but the Id works
solely out of the pleasure principle. It wants. Whatever social skills we've
learned, however much we've evolved, the pleasure principle is at work in all of
us. - So, how does this conflict with the ego manifest itself in the psyche?
What do we do when we can't have what we want?" (Beer Bad)
This is the state in which Adam and Eve are in the origin, devoid of a moral
conscience, they do not know what they should do. What they want, everything
they want, is at reach in the Garden of Eden. Heaven is the absence of guilt.
(Ironic when you think about Angel)
The best advocate of this state of nature (Cave Buffy not being too clear on
vocabulary:)) is indeed Veruca in Wild At Heart: "I can help you, Oz. You're
scared. I was, too. But then I accepted it. The animal, it's powerful, inside me
all the time. Soon, you just start to feel sorry for everybody else because they
don't know what it's like to be as alive as we are. As free." What she proposes
Oz to join, this is it. Freedom from moral principles, from society's rules, a
return to a primordial and animal state. Veruca isn't bad per se; she'd be more
properly called amoral. "You're an animal. Animals kill." She has no cruel
intention; she just doesn't care about what she does. What she wants, she takes.
For her it is only about obey her nature, and that nature is wild. She thinks
any ethical rule is equivalent to an artificial prison, and she can't understand
the idea that it's being internalized by Oz, which is the reason why she blames
Willow for his behavior. "She's the reason you're living in cages. She's
blinding you. When she's gone, you'll be able to admit what you are."
If almost everything is said in this episode, the seductive character of a
wild state that doesn't care about humanity's rules is yet again underlined in
Where The Wild Things Are (another indicative title) in Spike and Anya's
nostalgia for their killing days and the guilty pleasure taken by Buffy and
Riley in their forced sexual prison. Adam too describe with a certain skill the
wild and ferocious part of the Garden: "ADAM: You feel smothered. Trapped like
an animal. Pure in its ferocity, unable to actualize the urges within. Clinging
to one truth. Like a flame struggling to burn within an enclosed glass. That a
beast this powerful cannot be contained. Inevitably it will break free and
savage the land again. I will make you whole again. Make you savage." (The Yoko
Factor) It's ironic to see how Adam, who in appearance is so self-controlled, is
in reality such a slave of his murderous impulse, just like any demon. He shows
that technology used wildly isn't so different from nature in its amorality. The
Initiative is thus another figure of the Garden.
Concerning the three principal creations of the Season, their Garden of Eden
are quite present symbolically: Riley brings Buffy in a picnic in Something
Blue, Spike attacks Buffy in a park of the campus in The Harsh Light of Day
("SPIKE: Birds singing, squirrels making lots of rotten little squirrels."),
Adam kills a child in the wood in Goodbye Iowa. And also for Faith, who has an
idyllic picnic with the Mayor (which allow us to get a traditional snake in the
garden:)) before her awakening. For each of this characters this moments stands
for a time of happy ignorance and unchallenged obedience to their nature.
Something Blue is the one moment when Riley goes out with Buffy without their
mutual secret identities going in the way. Harsh Light of Day is the only moment
(with the brief apparition of Wild at Heart) when Spike is free of his chip,
free to revel in his predatory vampiric instincts. For Adam it's oddly his one
moment of freedom before being defined as a monster and the moment that defines
him as a monster. As for Faith, her picnic with the Mayor represents the only
time when she was feeling accepted, happy, without having to repress her most
savage impulses, before Buffy came, spoiling that. This Garden of Eden, which is
equivalent to the law of the wild jungle, we have a few representations of it
all along the Season: Two picnics, the parks of the campus (which by the way
means plain), a house invaded by plants, Iowa. a state of innocence, of simple
and natural pleasures, of uncomplex wildness and a freedom from the usual laws
and what they imply. But if this state is always looked at with nostalgia, it's
because it doesn't last.
III - Out of Heavens, Science and Conscience
I said before that Goodbye Iowa was the crucial point of this season's theme,
it is because it crystallizes exactly the moment of the fall of man out of
heavens for the three concerned characters who are Adam, Riley and Spike. Hence
its title by the way, Iowa and its fertile plans will there be our Garden of
Eden, and this is the time to say goodbye to it.
Riley's case is the clearest. In The I in Team, he bites the apple given by
Buffy-Eve. It's in response to this that Maggie Walsh acts. But behind this,
it's of course because Buffy stands for the power to think for oneself, in short
an internalized conscience and not authority, a knowledge of good and evil.
(Knowledge was analyzed in sexual term as early as The Freshman: "Willow: It's
just in High School, knowledge was pretty much frowned upon. You really had to
work to learn anything. But here, the energy, the collective intelligence, it's
like this force, this penetrating force, and I can just feel my mind opening
up--you know?--and letting this place thrust into and spurt knowledge into...
That sentence ended up in a different place than it started out in.") The
betrayal and the death of Walsh causes Riley's tearing away from his Garden: he
doubts the Initiative's authority, or as you could put it, he thinks for
himself. "RILEY: I thought I knew. But I don't. I don't know anything." (Goodbye
Iowa) So it's about rejecting the prejudiced knowledge given to him by the
Initiative, the identity made by Walsh (he refused to listen to Adam's files
about him) so as to forge his own.
Forrest stands for the part of Riley that keeps on blindly following the
Initiative, who doesn't leave the Garden. (Thus, it is not a coincidence that
his name means forest) He prefers to reject the responsibility of his problems
on Buffy-Eve over doubting of what he's been told, and he considers the demons
as mere animals. It is thus normal that he ends on Adam's side.
For Spike, Goodbye Iowa marks definitely his reject from the demonic world
when he's seen being thrown out of Willy's bar, which here plays the role of the
Garden. Of course, Spike has not yet a true knowledge of good and evil, it's the
chip that plays this role for him. However, it leads him to choose the side of
"Good", beginning with Pangs, then in Doomed, by his own choice, even if for it
was lead by purely selfish reasons. Pangs is already a little mirror of this
expulsion from the amoral paradise: the title can be seen as a pun, meaning both
hunger pangs (when we see a starving Spike wandering) and moral pangs, or
qualms. Can we associate the two of them is the question his case asks. Is the
incapacity to feed, to kill, enough to create a moral conscience ? Probably not.
But I think Spike stands here, in a quite ironic way, for most of humanity who
most of the time doesn't act for the good because it's the good (which is the
hero's mark); but because it's what they have an interest to do so in society
for purely selfish reasons. Of course, once could say he goes on to redemption's
road after that.
Concerning Adam, his case is more ambiguous. Out of room 314 ( Out of
curiosity, I've checked what verse 3.14 of Genesis is. It's the one describing
the snake's punishment to walk in the dust. I'm not sure it's relevant, but if
it is it's quite interesting. The Mayor was already in S3 an authority figure
associated with a snake, that the Initiative is another take on the theme. It's
also coherent with Walsh acting through jealousy against Buffy, made me think
that the snake is sometimes seen as an incarnation of Lilith, coming to take
revenge on Eve for her rejection by Adam), despite his "design flaw", Adam
doesn't reject Walsh's plans, quite the contrary, he accepts totally her
definition of him and decides to set her plans up: "ADAM: I have a gift no man
has. No demon has ever had. I know why I'm here. I was created to kill. To
extinguish life wherever I find it. And I have accepted that responsibility.
(Who Are You)"
Adam seems totally deprived of moral conscience, incapable to think for
himself. "ADAM: I'm aware. I know every molecule of myself and everything around
me. No one - no human, no demon - has ever been as awake and alive as I am."
It's because Adam KNOWS already everything there is to know about himself and
the world that he is unable to LEARN anything, to develop an internalized
morality. "ADAM: I've been thinking about the world. I wanted to see it. Learn
it. I saw the inside of that boy and it was beautiful. But it didn't tell me
about the world. It just made me feel. So now . . . I want to learn about me.
Why I feel? What I am?" (Goodbye Iowa) Adam's tentative analyzing can not allow
him to understand this 'why', by default he chose Walsh's file as a guide,
losing thus the occasion to think for himself. Paradoxically, ignorance is thus
a path toward a more complex knowledge than the Initiative's "science sans
conscience".
Tara is therefore right to stop Willow's spell to find demons around her:
"With your knowledge may we go in safety. With your grace may we speak of your
benevolence." Yes this knowledge from Thespia would allow security, but the time
of security is passed, they must walk out of the Garden and know good from evil,
humans from demons by themselves. Because knowing who's the demon and who's the
human isn't indicative anymore of good and evil.
If we go back to the other case of expulsion from heaven of the Season, apart
from Pangs that I've already talked about, there is Faith in Who Are You and
Jonathan in Superstar. In both this cases, the characters were trying to
reinvent themselves, to recreate a new identity using magic. If both this cases
are failures in appearance, they however allow them to discover a knowledge of
good and evil that makes them go out of the Garden. Indeed both of them make the
decision, after a bad beginning, to assume the responsibility that comes with
their new identity and act for the good / save lives. And it's this decision
that lead them to the failure of their initiative. But the journey they've made
here is far from a failure and allows them to actually discover themselves anew.
If they don't forget this knowledge: Faith showed then in Five by Five and
Sanctuary that staying on the path isn't that easy.
Conclusion: Nature or Culture?
The use of the theme of the fall from the Garden of Eden allows ME to
articulate with a certain nuance the dialogue between Nature and Culture.
Despite its amoral aspect, the Garden isn't totally condemned. On the contrary,
Where The Wild Things Are shows how much with too much repressing of it
(censoring the children's sexual ideas) we only makes it stronger. Chase the
natural, it chases back.
The case of Oz in New Moon Rising seems also to show this: the more he tries
to control his inner wolf, the more it's uncontrollable. Pangs condemns the
occidental invasion of America, but it refused to consider that it justifies
revenge on the present American society. Buffy and the Scoobies use their own
primordial energies to defeat Adam, before having to submit this primordial
energy in Restless. The Garden has its place, which mustn't be too repressed, or
too accepted.
Culture is also presented with ambiguity. The out of control technology of
the Initiative is not in the end so different from the barbarism of the Garden.
Nothing very original with the idea that knowledge should go in pair with
ethical conscience, of course, but to show that knowing too much can inhibit
learning is an interesting way to condemn prejudices and false opinions.
I'll end with the theme of Names which seems the most
enigmatic of this season and is also what encircles the relation ship between
Nature and Culture: Names is an acknowledgment of what is, of Nature, yet doing
so, it makes it a cultural fact.