By Karin Miller
The Associated Press
It's tough for scholars to be taken seriously when their subject is a TV show about a California blonde fighting evil in a high school built on a gateway to hell.
Particularly when the title is as campy as Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
But enough professors and writers study the comedic drama and its spinoff, Angel, to hold a deadly serious academic conference over the weekend in Nashville that attracted more than 325 people.
Buffyologists from as far away as Singapore were presenting 190 papers on topics ranging from "slayer slang" to "postmodern reflections on the culture of consumption" to "Buffy and the new American Buddhism."
There was even a self-conscious talk by David Lavery, an English professor at Middle Tennessee State University, on Buffy studies "as an academic cult."
"It's a badge of honor," said Rhonda Wilcox, a professor at Gordon College in Gerogia. "The main characters are outsiders. Others are looking at them funny, but they know they're doing the right thing so they do it anyway."
Wilcox, who wrote her doctoral thesis at Duke University about Charles Dickens, compared the show's depth and texture to the author's 19th century serial novels. "I think it's a great work of art."
It's also used as a teaching tool. College courses across the globe are devoted to the show, which was canceled last year, and secondary schools in Australia and New Zealand also provide Buffy classes. Episodes often are used to reach troubled teens, Lavery said.
Geraldine Bloustien, a professor who teaches Buffy among classes on communication studies and media production at the University of South Australia, coordinated a similarly popular academic Buffy conference last year in Adelaide.
"It's fascinating that here is a piece of television enjoyed all over the world," she said. "It has a coherence and a depth I hadn't seen for such a long time. It's like Sesame Street, which you can appreciate on several levels."
Jana Riess, a religious book editor for Publishers Weekly, said she's gotten tremendous response to her book What Would Buffy Do? A Vampire Slayer as Spiritual Guide. On Friday, the conference bookstore sold out its copies, so she brought in extras from her car.
She said she first got "sucked" into the show when she was pregnant and up late one night. "I was so entertained, and then I was embarrassed that I was so entertained.
"But then some of the best conversations I had about spiritual and moral issues were sparked by scenes from Buffy, like what happens after we die and whether the needs of one should outweigh the needs of the many."
Riess was thrilled with the opportunity to connect with fellow Buffyologists:
"We are the few, the proud, the lonely."
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On the Net: Slayage, the Online International Journal of Buffy Studies: www.slayage.tv
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