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  http://oran-mor.co.uk/viagra-flygplats.pdf#makes sildenafil citrate cas number  Sophia McDougall mentions briefly the racialization of the strong female character cliché and the dangerous ways it can intersect with the “strong Black woman” stereotype. Jumping fandoms for a second, Joss Whedon’s work is sadly a great example of this. Buffy the Vampire Slayer, the quintessential strong woman character, is actually super multidimensional. Hers is the story of someone who is pushed into the strong woman role by big, patriarchal forces (“In every generation, one Slayer is born, because a bunch of men who died thousands of years ago made up that rule.”) and would love to get to be/actually is “just a girl.” As a vampire with a psych degree tells her, “You do have a superiority complex. And you’ve got an inferiority complex about it. Kudos.” Buffy is impossibly strong, which actually creates some room for her to be complex. But then compare her to Zoe from Firefly, who I love (especially because Gina Torres is the shit), but who doesn’t get to be much besides strong, even when her husband is a leaf on the wind. Here, the strong female character intersects with Whedon’s standard Black character archetype: the morally conflicted soldier (Gunn on Angel, Truman in The Cabin in the Woods, Boyd Langton for the first season of Dollhouse, anyway. I also find it interesting that when Buffy dates this archetype he’s white – and many Buffy fans have called Riley boringly one-note).

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http://oran-mor.co.uk/viagra-flygplats.pdf#makes sildenafil citrate cas number  Sophia McDougall mentions briefly the racialization of the strong female character cliché and the dangerous ways it can intersect with the “strong Black woman” stereotype. Jumping fandoms for a second, Joss Whedon’s work is sadly a great example of this. Buffy the Vampire Slayer, the quintessential strong woman character, is actually super multidimensional. Hers is the story of someone who is pushed into the strong woman role by big, patriarchal forces (“In every generation, one Slayer is born, because a bunch of men who died thousands of years ago made up that rule.”) and would love to get to be/actually is “just a girl.” As a vampire with a psych degree tells her, “You do have a superiority complex. And you’ve got an inferiority complex about it. Kudos.” Buffy is impossibly strong, which actually creates some room for her to be complex. But then compare her to Zoe from Firefly, who I love (especially because Gina Torres is the shit), but who doesn’t get to be much besides strong, even when her husband is a leaf on the wind. Here, the strong female character intersects with Whedon’s standard Black character archetype: the morally conflicted soldier (Gunn on Angel, Truman in The Cabin in the Woods, Boyd Langton for the first season of Dollhouse, anyway. I also find it interesting that when Buffy dates this archetype he’s white – and many Buffy fans have called Riley boringly one-note).