| Seeking Chivalry and Finding Serenity | by Scott Farrell | ||||||||||||
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Part 3: Chivalry With Serenity |
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We know what chivalry really is, and we know chivalry and honor are integral elements in some of the greatest western and science fiction stories ever created, so we must now ask: Did Joss Whedons western in space fail because chivalry and Serenity are mutually exclusive?
When given the opportunity to make a quick profit, save his own skin or exploit others weaknesses, Mal instead fights a duel for a womans honor, teaches a girl to see herself as more than property, bypasses a payoff to deliver medicine to the suffering and puts his crew at risk to rescue passengers from kidnappers. At the conclusion of the pilot, Serenity, Simon asks Mal if the captain would commit cold-blooded murder by shooting a sleeping man. Mal replies:
Perhaps a clearer summary of chivalry has never been uttered. Of course, theres no question that Mals motives in these situations are sometimes cloudy but in the tradition of internally conflicted western heroes, this is what makes him such an interesting character. And this brings us to one final aspect of Firefly that, perhaps more than anything else, cements the presence of chivalry within the universe of the show: the concept of ennoblement. Throughout the brief run of the show, the crew of Serenity faces a variety of situations that place them in both physical and moral danger. Without a sense of chivalry and honor, the characters of Firefly would simply take their profits and run, laughing all the while at anyone who would be so naïve as to be hindered by conscience, duty or affection but thats not the case. What we see is that Serenitys crew struggles toward honorable deeds sometimes uncertainly and often reluctantly, but in the end they are all changed for the better by a greater awareness of chivalry.
This is a very different Jayne than the one we see in Out of Gas and Jaynestown, whose fickle loyalty has an obvious (and fairly low) cash value. But as a result of his exposure to honorable people throughout Fireflys story arc, Jayne begins to develop a sense of honor his concern for his reputation has risen above his concern for his own well being, and this is a tremendous, essential change for such a character. A tacit understanding of chivalry drives Jayne to transcend his baser nature, just as it does for nearly all of the characters in Firefly. Courage, loyalty, compassion, faith and mercy the virtues incorporated into the code of chivalry can be seen guiding, affecting and transforming the Serenitys crew, turning brutality into strength and avarice into responsibility, despite (or perhaps because of) contact with corrupt Alliance officials, brutal Reaver pirates, untrustworthy petty crime lords and any number of other disreputable desperadoes who populate Fireflys verse. Critics who cannot see chivalry in Firefly have lost sight of the fact that this ancient code of honor is deeply woven into the fabric of the marvelous characters who fly aboard Serenity. Chivalry is as crucial to the structure of Firefly as a foundation is to a skyscraper: Both are buried beneath the surface, invisible to the casual observer, but each is an indispensable part of a magnificent creation. If chivalry played any part in Fireflys failure, it was merely because the concept, as treated by Joss Whedon, may have proved too complex for viewers who could not, or would not rise above stereotypical notions of old-fashioned characters, stories and motives based on a code of chivalry more suited for bedtime stories and singing cowboys than for a metaphorical drama depicting the challenges of maintaining honor in a void. Viewers who came to Firefly with open minds and discerning intellects, however, discovered a synergistic, genre-bending universe where knights in shining armor sometimes wore brown coats, where a futuristic frontier became a proving ground for an ancient code of honor, and where lost shepherds, space hookers and roguish space-freighter captains could discover chivalry by finding Serenity.
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© 2006 Scott Farrell |
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