The original run of
Buffy (1997–2003) eventually led to the publication of a number of books and hundreds of articles examining the themes of the show from a wide range of disciplinary perspectives including
sociology,
psychology,
philosophy,
theology, and
women's studies. One of the first texts was written by
David Graeber, who published the article Rebel Without a God in 1998. Since January 2001,
Slayage: The Online Journal of Buffy Studies has published essays on the topic quarterly, and it continues to do so. ''
Fighting the Forces: What's at Stake in Buffy the Vampire Slayer was published in 2002, and since then many more Buffy'' books have been published by academic book publishers. There have also been a number of international conferences on the topic. "College courses across the globe are devoted to the show, and secondary schools in Australia and New Zealand also provide Buffy classes." The topic can even be undertaken as part of a
Master's degree in Cult Film & TV at
Brunel University,
London. Increasingly,
Angel is being analyzed alongside its predecessor, e.g. in the 2005 publication,
Reading Angel. The creator of
Buffy,
Joss Whedon, has responded to the scholarly reaction to his series: "I think it's great that the academic community has taken an interest in the show. I think it's always important for academics to study popular culture, even if the thing they are studying is idiotic. If it's successful or made a dent in culture, then it is worthy of study to find out why. Buffy, on the other hand is, I hope, not idiotic. We think very carefully about what we're trying to say emotionally, politically, and even philosophically while we're writing it... it really is, apart from being a pop-culture phenomenon, something that is deeply layered textually episode by episode." The response to this scholarly attention has had its critics. In 2005 Jes Battis, who authored
Blood Relations in Buffy and Angel, has stated that study of the
Buffyverse "invokes an uneasy combination of enthusiasm and ire", and meets "a certain amount of disdain from within the halls of the academy". Despite this, following the Third International Slayage Conference on the Whedonverses which was held June 5–8, 2008 at
Henderson State University in
Arkadelphia, Arkansas., and acknowledging "the extensive growth of Whedon scholarship" beyond
Buffy itself, the Whedon Studies Association was officially formed as "a non-profit organization devoted to the study of the works of Joss Whedon and his associates." Following multiple allegations made against Whedon in 2022, the organisation rebranded itself as the Association for the Study of Buffy+, with a new mission statement which clarified how they now "define
Buffy+ Studies as the scholarly exploration of
Buffy the Vampire Slayer and its related texts. This includes the work of the many contributors to the Buffyverse (i.e., the diegetic world of
Buffy), transmedial or intertextual engagements with the Buffyverse, and texts influenced by or sharing thematic concerns or representational strategies with the Buffyverse writ large." ==Examples of explored themes==