Browse: Home / I Might Not Show Respect To Your Job: DJ JD on Power Dynamics Among Firefly’s Companions

Menu

Skip to content
  • Home
  • Who We Are
  • About
  • Privacy
  • Contact Us
  • Login

The-SoluteLogo

A Film Site By Lovers of Film

Menu

Skip to content
  • Features
  • Reviews
  • Long Reviews
  • News
  • Articles and Opinions
  • Other Media
  • The Friday Article Roundup: The Truth is In Here
  • Lunch Links: Schwarzfahrer
  • Websites on the Internet: THE SOLUTE
  • New on DVD and Blu-Ray
  • Movie Gifts Holidays 2024

I Might Not Show Respect To Your Job: DJ JD on Power Dynamics Among Firefly’s Companions

Posted By Sam "Burgundy Suit" Scott on January 5, 2018 in Features, Other Media | 14 Responses

There’s a scene at the end of “Shindig” that fascinates me. Boorish Atherton Wing finally oversteps, threatening Inara, and he gets his comeuppance by being banned from the Companions’ Guild. She angrily explains that he can never again hire a Companion, and a bystander adds that he would therefore need to fall back on his winning personality to attract women from now on, God help him. Happy ending, roll credits, and never mind that Wing is still young, attractive, wealthy, socially upper-class and capable of at least temporary charm.

On the surface, the ownage makes perfect sense. He’d just threatened a Companion! The move certainly seems justifiable, and people have been banished for life from places for less. But the result implies that:
a. the Companions have a strong, centralized authority structure, that
b. Inara at least – or possibly any Companion – can access and influence, and
c. the Companions are literally the only form of prostitution available, even for wealthy nobility.

So, closing ranks certainly makes sense. But then again, this is prostitution, not haircuts. If another Companion finds Wing a perfect fit (…so to speak), does this mean that Inara just forbade her from ever seeing him again over a single incident, no matter how bad? Would a Companion have to stop being a Companion just to sleep with him again if she wanted to? Or can they go “off the books” since they’re having sex with their own bodies and all? But then how does that even work, given that aforementioned centralized authority structure that makes it possible for Inara to close all the Companions to Wing’s business (…so to speak) in the first place? It’s hardly a punishment if it doesn’t change anything, after all.

Imposed order requires force. This fact has long been a source of grief for sex workers, because they almost never were the ones in control of the available force—so the order being imposed came from someone else, and that worked out predictably to the force-holder’s advantage more than the sex worker’s. The Companions avoided that issue in the show’s run, having plenty of autonomy with very little explicitly-shown force—avoided but never answered it, and it begged many, many questions in my mind. Their autonomy reached as far as having an explicit monopoly on something literally anyone can do (or close enough.) What protects the Companions from wholesale annexation by, say, the Star Army? What do they do to independent contractors in their field who want to have sex for money but don’t feel like training for it for years? What happens to the washouts?

Saffron’s existence clarifies some of this, but also adds to the complexity. Her Companion training gave her a nearly limitless capacity for manipulation, to the point that she believably got away with using Poison Ivy’s knockout-kiss trick, as well as significant combat skills. We never found out what her backstory was, but it seems safe to assume that she wasn’t representing the Companions when she set out to hijack the ship. Inara recognized her Companion training to the point that she wanted to learn who she was—but there was never any mention of sanctions or retribution from the Companions themselves. They certainly appeared to be able to leave the (order? guild?) of their own free will, but then again maybe Saffron’s just good enough to leave, and nobody else is.

The show itself doesn’t even really seem to believe in any of this, though. If they were literally the only option available for sex work, why does Mal get so much mileage out of harassing her for “whoring”? Why does he even have it in his head to associate sex work as something demeaning and worthy of mockery? If the Companions really are the only sexual outlet available beyond marriage, it seems like they’d hold a role more like priests in this society anyway—which is certainly something that has also happened historically. No matter what Inara said to Wing, Mal’s treatment of her strongly suggests that more realistic prostitutes, of the type you’d find in every major city today, still exist—and that they were viewed in roughly equivalent social terms that we often use now. This, of course, flies entirely in the face of everything the show gives us about the Companions.

I said in the last essay that Inara was the most openly idealized of the four sexual utopias available, and viewed through that lens, it’s hard not to see something of a treatise in the character from Whedon himself. Sex work should be legal, sex workers should be prized and valued and “sex work” should be taken as a far more inclusive concept than the mere physical act. Okay, good and fine; Augustine of Hippo might agree, as well as plenty of sex workers. The problem with that is the same problem it’s always been: force. What force counteracts that force on display in “Heart of Gold”, where a group of Companions come quite close to being forced into a much more historically commonplace relationship between a brothel and jerks with guns? Because after all, the show did offer the idea that the contrary situation was at least possible in-universe—and it didn’t miss the point that the outcome might be ugly. Historically, I would’ve expected the situation presented in “Heart of Gold” to be the rule, not the exception.

Posted in Features, Other Media | Tagged DJ JD, Firefly, Nathan Fillion, Science Fiction, Television, TV

About the Author

Sam “Burgundy Suit” Scott

Sam is a features writer for Looper and studied writing under Kevin Wilson at Sewanee: the University of the South. He’s been a staff writer for The Solute since its launch in 2014 and editor of the Year of the Month series since 2017.

I don’t know how to put this, but he’s kind of a big deal. He has many leather-bound books and his apartment smells of rich mahogany.

Now on Patreon!
https://www.patreon.com/user/creators?u=23744950

  • Tumblr
  • Twitter

Related Posts

The cast of SuperstoreSuperstore & Sitcom Drama→

Year Of The Month: Miller on THE VALLEY OF GWANGI→

It’s Zendaya’s World, We Just Live Here: Persia on SHAKE IT UP→

Taco Break: Doing Right By The Day Players→

  • Comments
  • Popular
  • Most Recent
  • j*****@yahoo.com'
    mr_apollo on Year of the Month: Mon OncleWonderful piece, Sam. It's made…
  • j*****@yahoo.com'
    mr_apollo on Year of the Month: Mon OncleFellow heretic here. I've never…
  • n***********@gmail.com'
    Ruck Cohlchez on Film on the Internet: AN AMERICAN CRIMEI wouldn't have called it…
  • j***********@gmail.com'
    Son of Griff on LIFE ITSELFGlad to hear back from…
  • n*********@gmail.com'
    Jake Gittes on Film on the Internet: AN AMERICAN CRIMEThis is the single most…
  • “The End” of SAVAGES

    38399 views / Posted November 10, 2014
  • The Untalented Mr. Ripley: The Craft of Standup Comedy and the Non-Comedy of TOM MYERS

    30749 views / Posted June 26, 2018
  • What the fuck did I just watch? SPHERE

    30351 views / Posted March 19, 2015
  • Gordon with Mr. Looper

    Attention Must Be Paid: Will Lee

    27653 views / Posted January 7, 2023
  • Scenic Routes: SHOWGIRLS (1995)

    23361 views / Posted November 20, 2014
  • The truth is FAR out there.

    The Friday Article Roundup: The Truth is In Here

    December 6, 2024 / The Ploughman
  • This is a way lower res image than I will be allowed to get away with at the new site.

    Lunch Links: Schwarzfahrer

    December 5, 2024 / The Ploughman
  • Websites on the Internet: THE SOLUTE

    December 4, 2024 / ZoeZ
  • New on DVD and Blu-Ray

    December 3, 2024 / Greta Taylor
  • Movie Gifts Holidays 2024

    December 2, 2024 / The Ploughman

Last Tweets

    ©2014 - 2016 The-Solute | Hosted, Developed and Maintained by Bellingham WP LogoBellinghamWP.com.

    Menu

    • Home
    • Who We Are
    • About
    • Privacy
    • Contact Us
    • Login
    Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!