[identity profile] st_salieri.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] lateseasonlove
::waves hello:: This is such a neat community!

During my most recent BtVS rewatch, I was inspired to try to reclaim some of the more controversial (or obnoxious, depending on your opinion) characters: Dawn and the Potential Slayers. A little bit of meta follows. We'll see how much sense it makes.



She's more than that. She's me. The monks made her out of me. I hold her, and I feel closer to her than....It's not just the memories they built. It's physical. Dawn is a part of me.
-- The Gift


Introducing a new character into an established show -- especially a younger relative of the main character -- can very easily be the kiss of death. The Jossverse writers did this twice with Dawn and Connor, and both times they used the supernatural elements of the shows in their favor to keep from falling into the worst type of cliches. Connor did his growing up a hell dimension, avoiding entirely the problem of having a kid permanently around. And I think the way Dawn was introduced was done exactly right. I remember the first time I watched the beginning of S5; the fact that the rest of the characters were treating Dawn as an established fact was wonderfully surreal and provided a nice mystery for the first few episodes of the season.

In both cases, the characters of Dawn and Connor were used to the best benefit when they provided more insight into the characters of Buffy and Angel. In the case of Dawn, this insight is especially substantial because of the connection between the two characters. Now, it's always been a bit unclear to me exactly where Buffy got her insight that Dawn was somehow a part of her. Was it related to Joyce's sudden knowledge about who Dawn was? Was it due to the fact that Glory's power was slipping in those last few hours? Was it some innate Slayer knowledge that had been percolating in her brain ever since the monk told her about Dawn? Regardless, it's interesting that Dawn is, in some mystical way, a part of Buffy-the-girl.

Dawn serves as the link to the world which has always been a source of Buffy's strength. In the previous seasons, this link was mostly embodied by her mother and friends. I find it fascinating that Buffy was given this charge to care for Dawn at exactly the right time when she would need this link more than ever. With her mother's death and her own concerns about the nature of her Slayer self, Buffy was more than ever in need of a connection to the world around her. I think that, as much as she loved them, her friends wouldn't have been able to be the main source of that link any more, and I think that's part of the growing-up theme that Joss established in the last few seasons. Dawn depended on her in a way that no one else did.

By connecting with Dawn, Buffy was, in a way, connecting more with the human part of herself. (And incidentally, looking at the end of S5 this way makes me more comfortable with the circumstances of Buffy's death. By considering Dawn in light of her connection to Buffy, Buffy's self-sacrifice seems less fatalistic and more about accepting her own calling.) Dawn served to emphasize Buffy's humanity at a time when she was most afraid of losing it. And more than that, I think that her presence was preparing Buffy to later integrate the other side of her dual nature: her Slayer side.

You're all special. Most people in this world have no idea why they're here or what they want to do. You do. You have a mission, a reason for being here. You're not here by chance. You're here because you are the chosen ones.
-- Potential


Just as Dawn serves as a mystical extension of Buffy-the-girl, the Potentials in S7 are a mystical extension of Buffy-the-Slayer. I think that the Potentials provided the means for Buffy to gain the final pieces of knowledge about who she was in relation to her calling. After all, as any teacher can tell you, the best way to learn something is to teach it to someone else.

But it's more than about Buffy being a teacher. Buffy was in a unique position, as far as Slayers went, in that she already knew two others. But she must have spent time over the years wondering exactly why she was called. Why her, and why Kendra and Faith? What did they have -- or not have -- that made them the necessary vessels? Buffy had clearly worried during S5 that there was something missing in her, that she was lacking in humanity and the ability to love. The thought must have terrified her: was she this way as a consequence of being the Slayer, or was she chosen as the Slayer because this ability to disconnect from the world was part of her makeup to begin with? Faith's issues couldn't have reassured her.

Dealing with the Potentials in S7 allowed Buffy to see the truth for herself: those who were called to be Slayers were just girls. Some brave and some afraid, but all human, and all with an inner core of strength. I think that overseeing the Potentials was a way for Buffy to not only truly accept the Slayer part of herself, but also to reconcile and integrate it with her humanity. In a way, the Potentials are Buffy's supernatural family just as Dawn is, and in dealing with them Buffy is learning how to be herself.

I'm the Slayer, the one with the power. And the First has me using that power to dig our graves. I've been carrying you - all of you - too far, too long. Ride's over. -- Get it Done


I think there's another reason why Dawn ends up being important to Buffy's mission. Through her dealings with Dawn, Buffy has to learn to learn how to be responsible for someone -- and not in the same way she felt responsible for the safety of her friends. Buffy had to be the adult for someone who needed not only love and support, but guidance and firmness. During S5 and S6, Buffy struggled with dealing with someone who was so dependent on her.

In a sense, the whole thing was completely unfair. Buffy was having a hard enough time dealing with herself -- with her mother's death and the effects of her own resurrection -- and having to be responsible for a teenager (especially with Dawn's particular set of issues) was an added burden. But in light of what Buffy had to deal with in S7, it was completely necessary. In fact, Dawn's relationship with Buffy in S5 and S6 is a parallel to Buffy's situation with the Potentials in S7. It took practice and hard experience for Buffy to learn to be a surrogate parent to Dawn. At the beginning she allowed Giles to set the boundaries; when she did take control, she tended to completely overcompensate out of fear that she would lose Dawn. Buffy acted to preserve Dawn's safety, even when Dawn disliked her for it. Because of this, I think she got practice in doing what was best for her charges whether or not she was liked because of it. Dawn helped prepare Buffy to be the type of leader that a Slayer had never had to be before. If she hadn't had the experience of dealing with Dawn, she might not have been prepared to be the leader to the Potentials and act as a teacher during a time of war. (Which, by the way, was much different dynamic than being the leader of the Scoobies.)

If this was AtS, I'd speculate that it was the Powers who surreptitiously arranged for Dawn to be sent to Buffy so that she could give Buffy experience in the type of leadership Buffy would need to fulfill her destiny as the one who shared the power of the Slayer. But in BtVS, the Powers don't seem to play any kind of active role. In fact, the few times they seem to have intervened in the Buffyverse were related to Angel (i.e., magic snow and the sudden appearance of Whistler). Overall, the Buffyverse seems to downplay the role of the Powers in comparison to the Angelverse.

At some point, someone has to draw the line, and that is always going to be me. You get down on me for cutting myself off, but in the end the Slayer is always cut off. There's no mystical guidebook, no all-knowing council. Human rules don't apply. There's only me. I am the law.
-- Selfless


In the end, the Slayer was always alone. This wasn't about Buffy cutting herself off, but about her recognizing the gifts she'd been given and the burden that came with them. It was about recognizing her own strength, an absolutely necessary component of her ability to fight. In the end, as much as her friends and family were her connection to the world, it still came down to a reliance on her own strength. Buffy's known this from the very beginning. One of my favorite moments from the series is in Becoming II, when Angelus taunts her with being alone without weapons or friends. Even then, Buffy knew where her true strength lies.

The trick, of course, is how to pass this knowledge along. She wants to teach Dawn, and later the Potentials, where to find their power. (It really is all about power.) I think that part of the balancing act of S7 -- and part of the conflict between Buffy and the Potentials -- is that she simultaneously has to lead them and teach them to rely on themselves. Of course, her actions in Chosen are what allow the Potentials to truly utilize the lessons she's been teaching them.

So I say we change the rule. I say my power should be our power.
-- Chosen


And so the final act of Buffy's story is that she voluntarily shares her power. It isn't about giving her power to someone else -- which is basically what happens when a Slayer dies. Instead, Buffy changes the rule of the game and takes the power back from the proto-Watchers who imposed it on the First Slayer. It is at this point, I think, that the growing-up metaphor from the last few seasons comes full circle.

I've had a lot of people talking at me the last few days. Everyone just lining up to tell me how unimportant I am. And I've finally figured out why. Power. I have it, they don't....You guys didn't come all the way from England to determine whether or not I was good enough to be let back in. You came to beg me to let you back in. To give your jobs, your lives, some semblance of meaning.
-- Checkpoint


It's interesting to speculate about the implications of Buffy's actions in Chosen. For one thing, what does this mean for the surviving remnants of the Watcher's Council? The purpose of the Council was, among other things, to be the repository of knowledge and to train the line of Slayers. And really, it's not like the Slayers could have trained each other, given that there was only one at a time. It wouldn't be practical for the world's only Slayer to take the time to pass along her knowledge to however many Potentials they could round up, not when she could be fighting actual battles.

Once Buffy shared her power with all the girls, would there really be a need for a Council at all? Presumably the Slayers could do the job of identifying and training each other, as well as keep track of the history. Incidentally, I've wondered whether some of the female Watchers were in fact Potentials who were never chosen. What did these Potentials do when it became clear that they were too old to ever be the Slayer? What happened to those like Kendra, who was separated from her family at a young age? Did they simply shrug their shoulders and go back to everyday life? Did they join the Watcher's Council? Maybe some of them, the ones who couldn't go back to just being a normal girl, used the training they'd been given and simply fought the fight as well as they could without any superpowers. If this were the case, Buffy's actions were a huge benefit to those who chose to fight.

In order to be in a position to, in a sense, liberate the Slayers from the control of the Watchers, Buffy had to be a leader to the girls who came to her. I think that her relationship with Dawn gave her exactly the experience she needed to be able to act as a figure of authority for the Potentials. I have to admit that, as a whole, the Potentials are not my favorite characters to watch. In fact, I'll say for the record that it would take an act of God for me to actually like Kennedy. But I'm intriuged by the mystical connection between the Potentials and Buffy-the-Slayer, which seems to find a neat parallel in the mystical connection between Dawn and Buffy-the-girl.

Date: 2006-02-11 02:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] frenchani.livejournal.com
I could not more agree with your analysis!

Just as Dawn serves as a mystical extension of Buffy-the-girl, the Potentials in S7 are a mystical extension of Buffy-the-Slayer. I think that the Potentials provided the means for Buffy to gain the final pieces of knowledge about who she was in relation to her calling. After all, as any teacher can tell you, the best way to learn something is to teach it to someone else.

This is so true! I also think that there was reason Buffy was so harsh when Chloe committed suicide, it kinda echoes Buffy's own death wish in season 5, it's the dark part of the Slayer, her weak spot. "I'm the slayer. The one with the power. And the First has me using that power to dig our graves."

In order to be in a position to, in a sense, liberate the Slayers from the control of the Watchers, Buffy had to be a leader to the girls who came to her. I think that her relationship with Dawn gave her exactly the experience she needed to be able to act as a figure of authority for the Potentials.

Agreeing again. You know this reminds me of Spike's speech in "Touched":

SPIKE
You were their leader and you still are. This isn’t
something you gave up. It’s something they took.
BUFFY
And the difference is?
SPIKE
We can take it back.


It isn't only about leadership but about power. Buffy took the power back from the CoW first in "Checkpoint" in order to fight for Dawn and foremost in "Chosen" when she chose to change the rule and activate the Potentials. Each time she took back what belonged to the Slayer.


Sorry for multi-replying, I can't type today!

Date: 2006-02-11 03:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] timeofchange.livejournal.com
It isn't only about leadership but about power. Buffy took the power back from the CoW first in "Checkpoint" in order to fight for Dawn and foremost in "Chosen" when she chose to change the rule and activate the Potentials. Each time she took back what belonged to the Slayer.

Good point.

Date: 2006-02-11 03:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] timeofchange.livejournal.com
Excellent essay. I totally agree.

Date: 2006-02-11 03:57 pm (UTC)
elisi: Edwin and Charles (Slayer by kathyh.)
From: [personal profile] elisi
I was inspired to try to reclaim some of the more controversial (or obnoxious, depending on your opinion) characters: Dawn and the Potential Slayers.
And I'm so glad you did! This is excellent and proves yet again that we share a brain! :)

Date: 2006-02-11 04:13 pm (UTC)
kathyh: (Kathyh Buffy)
From: [personal profile] kathyh
But I'm intriuged by the mystical connection between the Potentials and Buffy-the-Slayer, which seems to find a neat parallel in the mystical connection between Dawn and Buffy-the-girl.

That's fascinating. I must admit to never really having got to grips with what the Potentials added to the storyline at all until right at the end when they needed to be there for Buffy to share her power. You've made them seem a more organic part of the story than I'd previously considered them to be. Excellent thoughts. Thanks.

Date: 2006-02-11 04:51 pm (UTC)
fishsanwitt: (Spuffy SB hallway)
From: [personal profile] fishsanwitt
Wonderful essay. It's going straight into my memories :)

I have to admit - I rarely dissect the shows I love - I just love them. If I connect with them, emotionally, then I'm hooked. that's why I love all the essays and reviews - because I get to read other opinions, which are better written than anything I could put out and I get to understand, more deeply, what it is that touches me about the show and the characters.

Thanks again for this!

::hugs::

Date: 2006-02-11 05:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zanthinegirl.livejournal.com
Very interesting essay; some excellent points. Of course, I always kind of liked Dawn, and though her presence brought out new characteristics in all the characters.

In addition to Buffy's reaction to her, we saw her interactions with Willow and Xander. She clearly adored Willow, and Willow had a "Cool Aunt" type of relationship with her until season 6 when Willow went off the rails. And Dawn's crush on Xander was just cute. That at least held through a little in season 7 when Xander and Dawn had my favorite non- Spike moment of the season!

Dawn's relationship with Spike is a whole other essay; and I'd argue that it brought out the best in both characters. Too bad it was dropped. Stupid ME!

I sort of liked the potentials at first; but I think that their sheer numbers prevented any real character development.

Date: 2006-02-11 07:38 pm (UTC)
ext_7259: (Default)
From: [identity profile] moscow-watcher.livejournal.com
Great essay!

I remember the first time I watched the beginning of S5; the fact that the rest of the characters were treating Dawn as an established fact was wonderfully surreal and provided a nice mystery for the first few episodes of the season.

That's when I started looking for the into online because I thought I missed something crucial. In result I discovered the pleasures of fandom.

Date: 2006-02-11 08:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lillianmorgan.livejournal.com
Thanks very much for this very insightful essay. Lots and lots to mull over.
It's interesting how both sets of characters, Dawn and the Potentials, tend to be overlooked and/or scorned. I wonder why that is? It's a shame, particularly in light of this essay, for the far-reaching (for want of a better word) potential they all could enact for Buffy. Dawn is definitely a character that has been redeemed for me after the show has concluded.
In both cases, the characters of Dawn and Connor were used to the best benefit when they provided more insight into the characters of Buffy and Angel.
That's a very interesting point, and a nice parallel between the shows; a humanising element to both characters.
Dawn helped prepare Buffy to be the type of leader that a Slayer had never had to be before.
I very much like this idea, but can't help feeling sorry for Dawn for being the testing ground!
I guess this is why, perhaps, it was important that Dawn did not become a Slayer as was hinted at and then scupered in Potential for she was the line that delineated Buffy-the-Slayer from Buffy-the-Girl.
It isn't about giving her power to someone else -- which is basically what happens when a Slayer dies.
Yes, I've come to understand that the message of Season 7 is much more about empowering rather than trading on power.
Some lovely points here, I'm sure I'll be back for more.

Date: 2006-02-11 11:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kcarolj65.livejournal.com
Nice essay. This observation - It's interesting that Dawn is, in some mystical way, a part of Buffy-the-girl - reminds me strongly of Nan Dibble's wonderful Blood series, in which Dawn's being made from Buffy is examined and portrayed in a wonderful, thoroughly believable way, and provides much of the drama early in the second part of the series. If you've not read it, I highly recommend it.

Date: 2006-02-11 11:41 pm (UTC)
shapinglight: (Default)
From: [personal profile] shapinglight
Great essay. I always liked Dawn and felt dreadfully sorry for her in season 6. Your essay has helped me see both why it was necessary for her to be there and why things had to progress between her and Buffy as they did.

Don't like the Potentials much but of course they are very important to the theme of the season and therefore a necessary evil (if I can put it like that).

Date: 2006-02-12 12:02 pm (UTC)
shapinglight: (Default)
From: [personal profile] shapinglight
I think Amanda was everyone's favourite, which is why ME decided to kill her. Typically Jossian knife-twisting, which is worth an essay on its own.

I quite liked Vi too. She was spunky without being annoying.
(deleted comment)

Date: 2006-02-14 08:54 am (UTC)
shapinglight: (Potentials)
From: [personal profile] shapinglight
and telling Rona (I think) that her wound was nothing

Bet it was Rona. The girl never stops whining. I guess it's supposed to be some kind of coping mechanism.

Date: 2006-02-12 04:20 am (UTC)
molly_may: (Buffy and Willow - nina_97)
From: [personal profile] molly_may
Dawn served to emphasize Buffy's humanity at a time when she was most afraid of losing it.

In "The Gift", when Buffy says "Dawn is a part of me. The only part that I..." I've always thought that what Buffy was trying to articulate here was that she felt Dawn was the part of her that retained her humanity - the part that was all humanity, what she might have been like if she hadn't been the Slayer, and that was part of why Buffy was willing to sacrifice anything in order to save her.

Dealing with the Potentials in S7 allowed Buffy to see the truth for herself: those who were called to be Slayers were just girls. Some brave and some afraid, but all human,

I had never really thought about it that way, but it makes so much sense! Buffy is finally provided the opportunity to see that Slayers are created from "normal" girls.

I didn't always like the Potentials as individuals (though in my rewatch I realized that I liked Kennedy just fine up until about GiD), but I very much liked the way they gave Buffy a new role to play and the way they were used in "Chosen".

Date: 2006-02-12 09:06 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] aycheb.livejournal.com
This was excellent.

I'd previously only drawn a negative link between Dawn and the potentials - the idea that a big part of why Buffy wouldn't let herself get to close to her slayer army was that she felt she couldn't risk falling into a Weight of the World like state every time she inevitably lost one of them. But I like this positve version of things much better. I also like Kennedy except for that scene in Touched where she seems to be channeling Tara.

Date: 2006-02-13 03:39 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] untitleddemo.livejournal.com
Ooh! Very interesting essay here. You know, there were so many moments of Dawn's brattiness, and moments of the Potentials annoying ways, that it is sometimes hard to see just what exactly the purpose of their conduct on the show was. Your essay really points out the need for their behavior, as a learning tool for Buffy. It's really amazing how everything seems to make more and more sense as people point out their theories.

I find it fascinating that Buffy was given this charge to care for Dawn at exactly the right time when she would need this link more than ever. By connecting with Dawn, Buffy was, in a way, connecting more with the human part of herself.

Exactly, Dawn came at just the right time to connect with Buffy before their mom passed away. Her scenes with Dawn always struck me as very real and human. And in fact, it seems her sacrifice in The Gift was chosen by the human part of herself, and not just because she was the slayer, defender of the world, blah, blah, blah. It really makes that episode even more moving and emotional. Joss, you brilliant bastard!

In a way, the Potentials are Buffy's supernatural family just as Dawn is, and in dealing with them Buffy is learning how to be herself.

Oh I love this! Yes, they are all connected in this supernatural way. And with Buffy having to take charge and lead and train them, she really does take on the big sister role. What an interesting idea! I love the thought that it was necessary for Buffy to learn these roles, from both Dawn and the potentials, in order to free the Slayers from the Watchers. It all seems so perfect, and now I'm all full of girl-power pride, which I suppose was the intent of the potentials storyline all along.

Wonderful, thought provoking ideas, thank you so much for sharing them!

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