Originally posted by sapphocrazygirl
Alright all, I just had to add my 2c about S6 DVD as released in the US, seeing as I'm an unemployed college chick who spent the better part of the last two days watching it...
If you all get your hands on a copy, you should check out the Season 6 summary. Part of it does deal with Tara, and they talk about how whenever a couple is happy on the Hellmouth, you know something's going to go wrong, and also that S6 was a lot about how "life is the big bad," how it's difficult just to live and especially to deal with things that happen in your life that you can't change with mystical stuff.
I have to say that I have always been a W/t girl, and always hated ME for killing Tara. But (and this from the eighteen-year-old who faithfully watched 6am reruns for her first taste of Buffy and screamed "What?!!" at the end of Seeing Red and proceeded to cry for quite a long time) I am sort of coming around to their way of thinking, or at least I can see their logic; they are right about no happy couples on the Hellmouth, and about life being not changed by mystical things.
I guess what I'm trying to say is that I'm not sure that Tara's death is part of the "evil/dead lesbian cliche". I think that Joss and the other directors/writers/producers really did care about Tara and didn't just cater to some cultural need to see lesbianism immediately countered by evil or death. Tara's death serves more of the Buffyverse plotline than some big archaic thing.
There can't be happy couples on the Hellmouth. At the same time you can't get rid of Tara by getting Willow distracted by another lover, by Willow's use of magick, by Tara going crazy, or by making Tara evil, because you've already dealt with all those options. Really killing her can seem like the primary option. You can't vamp her because no one is going to buy into Evil Tara. You can't really have any demon kill her because then you deal with Buffy not protecting her and that would create lots of angst and guilt. But to have her die, like Joyce, in an uncontrollable and human way, is really sort of humane if you think about it. Because people do get shot, and you can't fix it, and grief is just bloody overwhelming.
If Joss and ME hadn't wanted lesbians on the show, why was there the B/F factor? Why Tara in the first place? I don't think any of us would have questioned it if Willow had fallen in love with another guy, rather than meeting Tara (yes, this is heresy, but seriously, think pre-Doppelganger - did we have any clues preceeding that?). And if they had wanted to dispense easily of Tara, why did they make her so sweet and loving and wonderful? The only problem with Tara, ever, was that she had demon in her - and hey, that was a big fat lie.
I think Joss Whedon actually did much more for the lesbian culture than a lot of people are willing to give him credit for. He did something really risque that might have lost him a lot of viewers, but he did it anyway. He showed that lesbians aren't evil, that they are happy together, that they go through difficult times with friends and parents, that they don't corrupt small children, that they're not immoral, that they have religion and kindness and goodness.
And in this culture, honestly, I feel as a lesbian that I have very little to go on. You put a lesbian (or gay for that matter) couple in a movie and immediately it's "the gay movie." It seems like our culture can't deal with the fact that being gay, coming out, being in a relationship can be second-fiddle to a larger plot; but Joss did that for us. He did what he could to write sex scenes under the bar, like the Flaming O, so that the censors let it pass but the audience got the drift. And he gave us beautiful moments like Hush and New Moon Rising and Entropy and so many other subtle things, just looks and gestures sometimes, that obviously have touched a lot of our hearts.
I will never be happy that Tara died, ever. But I am grateful to Joss for the other things that he did with her, for the beautiful characters he created and the relationship that just flowed between them with so much beauty.