Popular Culture Review Vol. 13, No. 2, Summer 2002 | Page 84

80 Popular Culture Review various situations, their predatory behavior is also coded as criminal, and the fact that they exist outside normal systems of economic exchange and “feed off the living” often codes them as lower-class citizens or even parasitical welfare recipients. Therefore, rather than simply representing abstract ideas, such as the failure of reason, science, and social order, or as a problem that must be completely eliminated, vampires and demons—creatures without souls—^represent figures who are truly marginahzed by society and supposedly in need of disciphne. This relationship between vampires and discipline is particularly appropriate given that, according to Foucault, the exercise of disciphnary power is directly linked to the notion of the soul. Foucault argues that the soul is produced in the act of punishment, and thus the history of the creation of the modem institutional apparatus is also a “history of the modem soul”: “[The soul] is not bom in sin and subject to punishment, but is bom rather out of methods of punishment, supervision and constraint” (29). In other words, the notion of a soul is inherently connected with forces of control, and rather than simply “slaying” the soulless, as her job title suggests, Buffy’s exercise of disciphnary power actually rehearses the process by which souls are produced and sustained. This connection between disciphne and the soul is most exphcit in the character of Angel. In an invers ion of the traditional Faust myth, Angel is punished for his evil deeds by being given back a soul, which causes him to experience torment and guilt. His punishment and his soul are thus inseparable, and for as long as he retains his soul, he continues to be punished. Therefore, rather than critiquing Foucaultian institutions, BtVS actually demonstrates the uses of power which Foucault describes as essential to modem penal systems. For example, unhke the medieval torture scene Foucault describes in “The Spectacle of the Scaffold,” Buffy and Angel’s methods of punishment are not linked to economic and political status. They are not representatives of a monarchical or governmental power, but rather justice itself, otherwise known as the seemingly benevolent “Powers That Be” (PTB). The objective of this system of justice is, as Foucault argues for the modem penal system, “to make of the punishment and repression of illegahties a regular function, coextensive with society; not to punish less, but to punish better; to punish with an attenuated severity perhaps, but in order to punish with more universahty and necessity; to insert the power to punish more deeply into the social body” (82). Rather than performing the function of the executioner, Buffy and Angel hve within society, integrating their roles as punishers into their everyday hves. Buffy and Angel can also be distinguished from executioners by the fact that their punishments are more “humane.” Unlike executioners, who perform a spectacle of torture in front of a crowd to deter future crimes, Buffy and Angel’s tactics do not rely on terror, shock, and physical horror, but rather they are depicted as measured, merciful, and appropriate to the crime. In the chapter “The Gentle