The Locator -- [(subject = "Future The in popular culture")]

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Author:
Pape, Toni, 1983- author. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2018138948
Title:
Figures of time : affect and the television of preemption / Toni Pape.
Publisher:
Duke University Press,
Copyright Date:
2019
Description:
218 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm.
Subject:
Television programs--Political aspects--United States.
Television programs--Social aspects--United States.
Television broadcasting--United States--Influence.
Time on television.
Television programs--Plots, themes, etc.
Future, The, in popular culture.
Political culture--United States.
Future, The, in popular culture.
Political culture.
Television broadcasting--Influence.
Television programs--Plots, themes, etc.
Television programs--Social aspects.
Time on television.
United States.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 204-216) and index.
Contents:
The serial machine : toward figures of time -- Three representations and a figural : Bergsonian variations on metric time, the virtual, and creative becoming -- Loop into line : the moral command of preemption -- Damages as procedural television.
Summary:
Many contemporary television series from 'Modern Family' to 'How to Get Away with Murder' open an episode or season with a conflict and then go back in time to show how that conflict came to be. In 'Figures of Time' Toni Pape examines these narratives, showing how these leaps in time create aesthetic experiences of time that attune their audiences to the political doctrine of preemption-a logic that justifies preemptive action to nullify a perceived future threat. Examining questions of temporality in 'Life on Mars', the political ramifications of living under the auspices of a catastrophic future in 'FlashForward', and how 'Damages' disrupts the logic of preemption, Pape shows how television helps shift political culture away from a model of rational deliberation and representation toward a politics of preemption and conformity. Exposing the mechanisms through which television supports a fear-based politics, Pape contends, will allow for the rechanneling of television's affective force into building a more productive and positive politics.
Series:
Thought in the act
ISBN:
1478004037
9781478004035
1478003731
9781478003731
OCLC:
(OCoLC)1037808806
LCCN:
2018040995
Locations:
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

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