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         Rupert Giles and Search Tools for Wisdom in Buffy the Vampire 
          Slayer  
        ©2001 by GraceAnne A. DeCandido, MLS, ladyhawk@well.com 
 
        I am not alone in the belief that the appearance of school librarian 
          Rupert Giles on television's Buffy the Vampire Slayer has done 
          more for the image of the profession than anything in the past fifty 
          years, with the possible exception of Katherine Hepburn in Desk Set. 
          Giles, this wily and attractive professional, is our hero librarian: 
          a pop culture idol whose love of books and devotion to research hold 
          the key to saving the universe - every week. I know librarians who use 
          quotations from the episodes in their email sig files. The Internet 
          Public Library has named all of its office computers after characters 
          in the show. 
         For those who might inexplicably have missed it, I will attempt a brief 
          summary of the dramatis personae in the Buffyverse over the past three 
          years. Giles is The Watcher: the source of training, counterintelligence, 
          and guidance for high schooler Buffy Summers, the one of her generation 
          chosen as the Vampire Slayer. Giles is the school librarian and Buffy 
          a student at Sunnydale High School, in a balmy southern California town. 
          Sunnydale is most notable for being situated on the Hellmouth: a place 
          where vampires, demons, and the forces of darkness gather as bees to 
          honey. Buffy, a small, delicate-looking blonde of supra-human strength, 
          relies on Giles not only for adult support and coaching, but also for 
          the research necessary to do that for which the Vampire Slayer has been 
          chosen. In the third season, Giles is officially relieved from his Watcher 
          duties, but he ignores that and continues as Buffy's trainer, confidant, 
          and father-figure. 
         Buffy's buddies (called, affectionately, the Slayerettes or the Scooby 
          Gang) include the nevercool Xander; his best friend the brilliant and 
          fashion-impaired Willow; Xander's reluctant sweetie and later nemesis 
          the gorgeously shallow Cordelia; and Willow's occasional genius (and 
          occasional werewolf) boyfriend Oz the musician. They comprise Buffy's 
          support group. They meet and conduct much of their research in the school 
          library. Giles, whose collection development policy must be an extraordinary 
          document, has access in the stacks to a vast number of volumes on vampire 
          and demon lore, the occult, witchcraft, spellcasting, and other rarities 
          not usually found among the copies of Huckleberry Finn and Weetzie 
          Bat. (That gets him into trouble with censors, too, as we see in 
          Gingerbread.) 
         Others in the cast definitely come from the dark side. Buffy's own 
          love (and sometimes ex-honey) is a brooding, beautiful 243-year old 
          Irish vampire named Angel, who has been cursed with a conscience. There 
          are many vampires, demons, and Evil Guys, some of whom make multiple 
          appearances. The school principal is a regular bad guy; the town mayor 
          is an evil of monumental proportions. 
         Giles: our great sage and sex symbol 
         It is a heady experience for any profession to find itself an integral 
          part of a wildly popular TV series. How much more so for librarians, 
          who have been bedeviled with a poor public image since at least the 
          nineteenth century. Giles of course moves across the stereotype in other, 
          not necessarily positive ways - he is both male and technologically 
          inept. 
         Giles is tweedy, occasionally befuddled, and very wise, with a certain 
          amount of darkness in his own past. He dropped out of Oxford to pursue 
          magicks, but then moved to the British Library, and thence to Sunnydale 
          where duty called him. He comes from a family of Watchers, reads a number 
          of languages, and, until her untimely death, had a passionate relationship 
          with the Romany technopagan computer instructor, Jenny Calendar. 
         We have a librarian model who is elegant, deeply educated, well if 
          fussily dressed, handsome, and charged with eroticism. In a world of 
          teens where parents rarely make an appearance, he is a stable, friendly, 
          and supportive adult. He stands by Buffy even when the powers that be 
          require him to step down. He lives the faith that answers can be found, 
          and most often found in the pages of a book. 
         Giles is icon and image for us; in him we see our quotidian struggles 
          to provide the right information and the right data resolved into a 
          cosmic drama with the forces of darkness, some of which are extremely 
          attractive, by the way. We love Giles because at last we have a pop 
          image for our uneasy relationship with dark and light, information and 
          story, books and technology. 
         We love Giles and we loved his romance with the computer-instructor-cum-Romany-Wicca. 
          We mourned when - and this is as emotionally complicated as can be - 
          the vampire with a soul who loved Buffy murders Jenny, whom Giles loved. 
          We see Giles struggle valiantly with information sources, we can see 
          his love of story, we can see, as Xander says, that "knowledge 
          is the ultimate weapon" and that format is the least of our problems 
          when there are vampires and demons about. 
         Giles: "I believe the subtext here is rapidly becoming text" 
         The librarians who follow Buffy find a great deal of library lore and 
          information seeking behavior, as well as an occasional drop of genuine 
          wisdom, in the words of Giles, Buffy, and the denizens of Sunnydale. 
          We can deconstruct some dialogue from the show (with citations to episodes) 
          for our own delectation and amusement, as follows. 
         Willow: How is it you always know this stuff? You always know what's 
          going on. I never know what's going on. 
          Giles: Well, you weren't here from midnight until six researching it. 
           
          -Angel 
          Giles: Knowing why you are back [from hell] would give you peace of 
          mind? 
          Angel: It might. 
          Giles: You think that's something you ought to have? Because, sir, to 
          be blunt, the last time you became complacent about your existence turned 
          out rather badly. Well, we start, not surprisingly, with research. 
          -Amends 
          The plodding nature of most research cannot be eliminated, even by brilliance 
          and magic, even when we might not want to know what it is we are seeking. 
          It is Giles' particular gift to cast a glamour over the kind of dogged 
          reference we practice daily. He invests the methodical search for the 
          fact that will solve the problem at hand with a kind of fierce joy, 
          but he never underestimates its cost in time or care. 
         Giles: I'm sure my books and I are in for a fascinating afternoon. 
          -Phases 
          Giles, echoing Buffy: Get my books. Look stuff up. 
          -The Pack 
          Willow: I'm sure he will. He's like...Book Man! 
          -Passion 
          Books are central. It is in books that Giles, as the Watcher, finds 
          the images, the information, the incantation, the lore that will assist 
          Buffy in her struggle against the Hellmouth and its universe of monsters. 
          While Giles relies upon Willow to search the internet for materials, 
          like newspaper records and police logs, not easily accessible in print, 
          Giles believes that what he needs to know for Buffy's sake lies in his 
          many volumes at home and at work. Giles also makes that necessary leap 
          of faith common to all good librarians: he bridges the chasm between 
          the information as it lives in the text and the transfer of that information 
          into a form the Slayerettes and Buffy can actually use. Sometimes that 
          means literal translation, other times it means recasting what he reads 
          into stories, or tag lines, or aphorisms that make sense to the teens 
          he serves. The sacredness of the book, the literal power of words, underscore 
          the action in Buffy's world. They form the matrix and latticework for 
          all that terrific Pow! Kick! Stake! stuff that happens later. 
         Xander: He's like SuperLibrarian. Everyone forgets, Willow, that 
          knowledge is the ultimate weapon. 
          -Never Kill a Boy on the First Date 
          Willy: So, what can I do for you? Couple of drinks? 
          Xander: Yeah. Let me get a double shot of, um... of information, pal. 
          -Amends 
          While snide comments about Giles' profession abound, the core belief 
          that knowledge is the answer underlies all. This is apparent from Xander's 
          remarks even though he and others are often cavalier about regular school 
          assignments. What can be found in the library is central. There are 
          many weapons to be had in Sunnydale. Buffy uses the classic silver, 
          cross, and stake, among others and Giles has an array of medieval weaponry: 
          most of this is stored at the library. The Slayerettes have a very high 
          level of rapier teen wit, peppered with pop-cult references and sly 
          asides. The thirst to know, however, is at the core of it all: to know 
          the forces of darkness, to name them, and hence to defang them; to know 
          themselves, as they dance on the edge of maturity; to search out the 
          specifics of how to overmaster a particular demon along with the principles 
          of how knowledge can lead to larger truths. What a message for us to 
          emblazon on our t-shirts and on our hearts. 
         Angel: They're children, making up bedtime stories of friendly vampires 
          to comfort themselves in the dark.  
          Willow: Is that so bad? I mean the dark can get pretty dark. Sometimes 
          you need a story. 
          -Lie to Me 
          Oz: Fairy tales are real. 
          -Gingerbread 
          Willow places her hand precisely on a central truth of Buffy, and of 
          librarianship. Sometimes these teens need a story to cover themselves 
          for a lost assignment or a lost weekend. Sometimes, though, they need 
          a story to tell themselves to get through the latest horrific vision 
          or ghastly demise. Sometimes, it is the story itself that brings both 
          comfort and information: in the beginning of the third season, a voiceover 
          from Jack London's Call of the Wild was used to great effect. 
          We know this as we work. We know the reference desk as a continuing 
          story with cliche and banality along with a flashy denouement or a trailer 
          for next week. We know the story of staff meetings where we wish a wooden 
          stake could turn misbegotten shape to dust. We know the stories we tell 
          ourselves when one more technical problem threatens the simplest task. 
          And sometimes those stories hold a goblin, because how else could the 
          machines on which so much of our work lives are predicate be so damnedly 
          recalcitrant? 
          Buffy also identifies her role as a storybook hero in Killed by Death, 
          when she tells the child in the hospital, "We both know there are 
          real monsters. But there are also real heroes that fight monsters. And 
          that's me." The story enables us to see not only the teen Buffy 
          as a true hero, but Giles, Book Man, SuperLibrarian, as a hero also. 
         Jenny, to Giles: The divine exists in cyberspace the same as out 
          here. 
          -I Robot, You Jane 
          Giles has definite issues with computers and online technology. He is 
          a living metaphor for what those of us d'un certain ge might have 
          gone through as the profession we thought we had joined transmuted itself 
          into something very, very Else.  
          The core of librarians who got their MLS degrees 25 years ago and more 
          are now doing things professionally that were unimaginable to the selves 
          we were then. We came to librarianship because we loved the sound of 
          words talking to each other, rubbing up against each other; or because 
          the world inside a story was far more real to us than the world inside 
          our neighborhoods; or because we loved chasing an idea around. For many 
          of us, librarianship originally was a choice to separate ourselves from 
          workplaces that were less humane, less involved in the drama of peoples' 
          lives.  
          It came as a shock to some of us, as it does to Giles, that the glass 
          box (the computer Jenny refers to as "the good box") could 
          also be a tool in the search for knowing, and an increasingly indispensable 
          tool. In I Robot, You Jane, Giles tells Jenny, "If it's 
          to last, then the getting of knowledge should be tangible" in the 
          smell and texture of old volumes. In the same episode, Giles confesses 
          to Buffy that computers fill him with "childlike terror." 
          Jenny gently chides him for living in the Middle Ages, and assures him 
          he will enter the new century with a few years to spare. We do see him, 
          much later, yelling at a computer that has wantonly disconnected him 
          from the "Frisky Watchers Chat Room" (Gingerbread). 
         Giles: They're confiscating my books. 
          Buffy: Giles, we need those books. 
          Giles: Believe me, I tried to tell that to the nice man with the big 
          gun. 
          Giles: This is intolerable. Snyder has interfered before, but I won't 
          take this from that twisted little homunculus. 
          Snyder: I love the smell of desperate librarian in the morning. 
          Giles: You get out... and take your marauders with you. 
          Snyder: Oh, my. So fierce. 
          Snyder: Just how is, um, Blood Rites and Sacrifices appropriate  
          material for a public school library? Chess Club branching out? 
          -Gingerbread 
          Giles knows about challenges to the school library, too. In this chilling 
          episode, mothers turn against their own children, attempting to burn 
          the books that the principal and the parents see as harmful, occult, 
          or just plain weird. There's an aborted plot to torch teens along with 
          titles in the guise of chasing after child murderers (the ghost children 
          turn out to be demons themselves, sent to sow discord). 
         Buffy: You're the Watcher, I just work here. 
          Giles: Yes. I must consult my books. 
          -When She Was Bad 
          Giles: I'd best head to the library. Research beckons.  
          -Killed By Death 
          Buffy: But, Giles, it's one thing to be a Watcher and a librarian 
 
          The point is, no one blinks an eye if you wanna spend all your days 
          with books. 
          -What's My Line (Part 1) 
          Giles takes a lot of kidding because of his perceived stuffiness, his 
          single-minded approach to problems, and his apparent lack of current 
          awareness. However, the kidding doesn't negate how fully the Slayerettes 
          are invested in Giles as both a mentor and a symbol of adult comfort 
          and reassurance. He knows what his job is, so do they, and so do we. 
          YA and reference librarian Lesley Knieriem of the South Huntington Public 
          Library, New York said it well in an e-note: "Giles is appealing 
          to librarians in that he portrays us as we like to think we are: enormously 
          intelligent, literate, genteel, sensitive, devoted to our patrons, with 
          a sexy, ferocious 'ripper' concealed within, only to be let out when 
          needed to slay the demons of ignorance. Yes, he does fit many of the 
          stereotypes: bookish, stuffy, reserved, technophobic (this last isn't 
          any of us!). Giles embraces his stuffiness, pokes gentle fun at it, 
          and transcends it." 
          
          
          Giles: To forgive is an action of compassion, Buffy. It's not done 
          because people deserve it. It's done because they need it. 
          -I Only Have Eyes For You 
          We have all had supervisors who have done unforgivable things to us; 
          we may have done a few ourselves to those we supervise. We have all 
          had patrons who have fought their particular demons right in front of 
          the check-out desk, and we wanted to avert our eyes. Giles, given to 
          pronouncements but rarely to exhortation, here states a truth as cleanly 
          as any prophet. We hope it comforted Buffy; it can certainly comfort 
          us. 
        
 Giles: You mean life? 
          Buffy: Yeah. Does it get easy? 
          Giles: What do you want me to say? 
          Buffy: Lie to me. 
          Giles: Yes, it's terribly simple. The good guys are always stalwart 
          and true. The bad guys are easily distinguished by the pointy horns 
          or black hats. And, uh, we always defeat them and save the day. No one 
          ever dies, and everybody lives happily ever after. 
          Buffy: Liar. 
          -Lie To Me 
          We have seen the books and materials that provide us with information 
          and textual analysis of the bad guys can also provide us with stories 
          wherein we conquer the demons and go forth. Giles reminds us that some 
          days, the dragon wins. And that good and evil are rarely so separate 
          that we can distinguish them clearly without the white light of study 
          and analysis. Finally, we might look at the words of another character, 
          whom, we might say, knows that self-knowledge is the ultimate weapon. 
          His name is Whistler. 
         Whistler: Bottom line is, even if you see 'em coming, you're not 
          ready for the big moments. No ones asks for their life to change, not 
          really 
 The big moments are gonna come, can't help that. It's 
          what you do afterward that counts. That's when you find out who you 
          are. 
          -Becoming, Part 1 
          Whistler: There's moments in your life that make you. That set the course 
          of who you're gonna be. Sometimes they're little, subtle moments. Sometimes 
          
 they're not. 
          -Becoming, Part 2 
          Whistler, nominally a demon, has as his function to maintain the balance 
          between good and evil - a metaphor for technical services if there ever 
          was one. It is he who provides Angel with the opportunity to even the 
          odds for Buffy, and brings them together. Whistler indulges in a bit 
          of philosophy that might be as useful in our lives as in our so potent 
          art. Change will come, and it is what we do when it comes that matters. 
          We have our tools. 
         Giles: You did good work tonight, Buffy. 
          Buffy: And I got a little toy surprise. 
          Giles: I had no idea that children en masse could be gracious. 
          Buffy: Every now and then, people surprise you. 
          -The Prom 
          Named as Class Protector during the Prom, Buffy has a moment of 
          solace, and Giles sees the teenagers he serves in a new light. People 
          surprise us all the time, in the questions they ask, in the way they 
          use the answers, in their need to know, and sometimes in their gratitude. 
         Buffy and her friends have now graduated from high school, in a spectacular 
          denouement that banishes Angel and provides us with ample reason to 
          wonder what Giles' next career move is. He says Buffy no longer needs 
          the Watcher's Council, but it is clear she still needs a librarian. 
          
          Indispensable Buffy References 
          Golden, Christopher and Nancy Holder with Keith R.A. DeCandido. Buffy 
          the Vampire Slayer: The Watcher's Guide. Pocket/S&S. 1998. Pbk. 
          $14. ISBN 0-671-02433-7. The Episode Guide included (written by my son) 
          gives the writers credit for all these great lines, episode by episode, 
          from the first two seasons. 
        
 There are many Buffy web sites, official and not-so. A favorite of 
          mine is The Buffy 
          Cross & Stake. 
         The official Buffy the Vampire Slayer 
          site from the WB network, which owns all these characters and situations. 
           
         Two excellent articles from Salon magazine about Buffy: 
          http://www.salon.com/ent/log/1999/05/26/buffy_rant/index.html 
          http://www.salon.com/ent/tv/mill/1998/06/08mill.html 
         GraceAnne 
          A. DeCandido is an editor, writer, and cybergoddess in her own company, 
          Blue Roses. She has spoken about Giles at his alma mater, Oxford, and 
          at his state conference, the California Library Association. An earlier 
          version of this article, covering the first two seasons, appears in 
          The Cybrarian's Manual 2, edited by Pat Ensor, American Library 
          Association. A somewhat different version of this article was the cover 
          feature in American Libraries magazine for September 1999, and 
          is included in The Whole Library Handbook 3, edited by George Eberhart, 
          also published by ALA. 
         Please do not distribute or reproduce without my express permission: 
          Email ladyhawk@well.com 
         GraceAnne A. DeCandido ©1999, 2001 ladyhawk@well.com 
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