Monday, 23 June 2014

Echo becomes Ajax; Iphigenia fails to become Buffy, poor thing

Dollhouse characters. L to R: Paul Ballard, Vi...
Dollhouse characters. L to R: Paul Ballard, Victor, Echo, Sierra, Topher Brink, Adelle DeWitt, Boyd Langton (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
I know for a certainty that there are many other things I should be doing, but am enjoying writing about Dollhouse and Sophocles way too much to stop. Would Sophocles have survived if he'd had to write serial television? Can character development ever = character stasis? Does an ensemble TV series ever = Oedipus? Just how classical is Whedon?
However, today I will put off these questions because working on Iphigenia and Buffy. So, still having fun.

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Sophocles and Dollhouse

I have been struggling to revise an overlong conference paper I gave, or gave part of, a few years ago in Seattle, trying to see if I can turn it into an article; or, failing an article, a draft I can link on academia.edu in the "conference paper I don't plan to publish" category. So far, I'm failing dismally. The subject is in what ways the character "Echo" in Joss Whedon's series "Dollhouse" is a Sophoclean hero, and how that matters. But this subject leads me apparently unavoidably into philosophical questions that I really don't want to engage, at least not in what was supposed to be a light-hearted pop culture paper (What is reality? Do souls exist? Is chocolate a necessary food group?)
At the very least, I don't think there's any way I can revise the paper, which should probably have been titled in its original form "every single thing I can think of that interests me about Dollhouse, in no particular order", to make it answer the original question. I can start a new paper on that question, but I don't think I can revise this one to fit.
On the other hand, I have always hated revising more than anything. I would far rather write a new thing than revise an old thing so that it actually works. So perhaps I shouldn't throw in the towel yet.
I have, I think, thought of the solution: more research! Or to quote Matt Groening's advice to grad students on how to avoid the agony of writing: when all else fails, "Read another book". I'm sure someone out there has already answered all the interesting philosophical questions in Dollhouse, and I can just cite them, and get back to Sophocles.

Saturday, 31 May 2014

Sophocles, Dollhouse, and academia.edu

Cover of Dollhouse Epitaphs
Cover of Dollhouse Epitaphs (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I spent Thursday evening updating my listing on academia.edu, and decided to upload a few conference papers, if I had any lying around that I was unlikely to write up for publication, but that people might be interested in reading.  In the end I settled on a few that were more likely to be of interest to non-classicists.  So I have uploaded one on Helen in the Penelopiad, and one on Atanarjuat and the Oresteia, in addition to the old "Buffy the Vampire Slayer: The Greek Hero Revisited" which is by far the most widely-read piece I have ever written.  On looking through my other conference papers I found another that might interest Whedonites, on Sophocles and Dollhouse, but it isn't in shape to be seen yet (quite literally; I can only find the outline, and it needs rewriting).  So that's what I've been doing today.  

Was this what needs to be done? Or, to put it another way, was it the most urgent of the tasks before me? Well, hardly.  But in fact that paper raised some very interesting questions, at least for me, and it is a pleasure to think through some of them again.


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Monday, 10 February 2014

Thank you, JSTOR



And thank you, "articles that cite this article", in JSTOR.  And thank you, JSTOR beta-search:

  • Detienne, Marcel (1968:2012), ‘On Efficacy in Practical Reason: Comparative Approaches’, Arion: A Journal of Humanities and the Classics, 20 (1), 43-60.
  • Gaskin, Richard (1990), ‘Do Homeric heroes make real decisions?’, The Classical Quarterly, 40 (1), 1-15.
  • Jones, PV (1996), ‘The independent heroes of the Iliad’, Journal of Hellenic Studies, 108-18.
  • Rosenmeyer, TG (1990), ‘Decision-Making’, Apeiron, 23 (4), 187-218.
  • Sharples, RW (1983), ‘’But Why Has My Spirit Spoken with Me Thus?’: Homeric Decision-Making’, Greece & Rome, 30 (1), 1-7.
  • Wilson, Joseph P (2007), ‘Homer and the Will of Zeus’, College Literature, 34 (2), 150-73.

This gives me enough to begin with.  Especially Rosenmeyer.  Thank you, Rosenmeyer. And Sharples.

Sunday, 19 January 2014

decisions, decisions

Once it had crossed my mind that the depiction of decision-making in narrative was an
Zeus, about to make a questionable decision
extraordinarily important part of pretty much every story, or at least every story I've ever been interested in reading, beginning with the Iliad, or possibly with the Epic of Gilgamesh (well, to be honest, more the Iliad), I assumed that I could not be the first person who has ever noticed this, and that there would be a large body of literature on this precise point.  There should be loads of theory on this subject, I thought cheerfully.  I can find the theory, read it, apply it to the Iliad and to Alice Oswald and see what I get (presumably something different for the two works).  And I can do this by March, before the conference. Piece of cake. So I looked around a little.

So far as I can tell, no one has ever noticed that the depiction of decision-making matters in narrative.

I've asked my friends in philosophy.  Why yes, there is a HUGE body of work on decision-making in philosophy - whole departments are built around studying this question. It all has to do with rational actors, and what such an actor would do and how they would make their decisions.  Has anyone ever met a rational actor? I asked, momentarily diverted.  Well, no, my philosopher friends admitted.  The theory is about what they would do if there were any.

I asked friends in communications theory, which seems to have a lot to do with theories of narrative.  They pointed me to the same books, plus some rather more practical stuff  that described how people actually do make decisions.  This was more entertaining, but just as irrelevant to my project.   And there is a lot of work done in the business schools on how to make good decisions, i.e. ones that will keep you making money.  This is eminently useful to some people, or it is if it works.  However.

I am still searching for anyone who has published on how people DESCRIBE the decision-making process.  Possibly there's something in psychology.

I cannot believe there's nothing out there, and I don't want to reinvent the wheel.  Onward.

Thursday, 2 January 2014

fine, here's the actual outline

We bow to the protestations of numerous colleagues and here post the uncensored, unadulterated outline of our paper, just as it appears in our own notes, minus the variables (for which you will wish to substitute your own).


We trust others will find this as useful as we have in the generation of creative thought.

Wednesday, 1 January 2014

Whedon meets Euripides, redux

Finally having some time free, after teaching, marking, submitting, seeing family, and collapsing,  my colleague and I are tackling our "Sacrificial Virgins" paper again.  For some reason this has been surprisingly difficult to finish; after 3 days' work we realised this was because we were trying to fit in every single thing either of us had ever thought about Buffy, Euripides, or Sacrificial Virgins.

On reflection, however,  it is quite possible that we will write again on tragedy, pop culture, virgins, or some combination thereof, so some of  these thoughts can surely go in the next paper.

We have therefore after long and careful thought produced an outline for the current paper, which I shall reproduce here since, as article outlines go, it is a model, a succinct template which I am sure will be useful to many others.  In the interests of serving the needs of our colleagues, as little as possible has been withheld to protect our results before publication:




Happy New Year, all.