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Joss Whedon's works, across all media including television, film, musicals, and comic books, are known for their commitment to gender and sexual equality. They have always encouraged their audiences to love whomever, and however, they wish. This book is a history of the sexualities represented in the works of Joss Whedon and it covers all of Whedon's genres, including fantasy, horror, science fiction, westerns, superhero stories, and Shakespearean comedy.
Unique for its consideration of the entire arc of Whedon's two-decade career, from the beginning of Buffy the Vampire Slayer's first season in 1997 through the conclusion of its twelfth (comic book) season in 2018, this book examines in detail both better-known queer sexualities of the LGBTQ+ spectrum, and lesser-known non-normative sexualities. The book includes chapters on Whedon's sexually dominant women and submissive men, sexual pluralism on Firefly, disabled sexualities in Whedon's superhero narratives, zoophilia in Buffy, queer and heteronormative sexualities in Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog, the subversion of the sexual tropes of slasher films in The Cabin in Woods, and dominance and submission in Whedon's Much Ado About Nothing.
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Table of ContentsAcknowledgments viii
Foreword by Mary Ellen Iatropoulos
Preface: "Kinky Business"
Introduction: "Love Dares You"
One.¿"It's About Power": The Rise of the Whedonesque Dominant Woman, or Whedomme
Two.¿"Love Keeps Her in the Air": Radical Sexual Pluralism Aboard Firefly Serenity
Three.¿"The Breakable Ones": Disabled Sexualities in Joss Whedon's Superhero Narratives
Four.¿"Majestic Creature of Legend": Human/Animal Hybridity and Zoophilia in the Buffyverse
Five.¿"The Hammer Is My Penis": Queer and Heteronormative Sexualities in Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog
Six.¿"They Want to See Us Punished": Subverting the Sexual Tropes of the Slasher Film in The Cabin in the Woods
Seven.¿"To Bind Me, or Undo Me": Dominance and Submission in Joss Whedon's Much Ado About Nothing
Afterword: Reconsidering Whedonversal Sexualities in the #MeToo Era
Chapter Notes
Bibliography
Index
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Lewis Call is a professor of history at California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo. He has written extensively about representations of sexualities in the works of Joss Whedon and his co-creators, including LGBTQ+, BDSM, fetishism, and disabled sexualities. He lives in San Luis Obispo, California.