Centre for Law, Society and
Popular Culture
Television
drama, law and national identity
Symposium Announcement and First
Call for Papers
Friday 6 September 2019
Television drama
plays a seminal role in the cultural life of nations, and the way in which it
depicts national identities merits scholarly exploration. In this regard national identity’s
relationship with law as its crystallisation is particularly worthy of academic
attention and lends itself to interdisciplinary and comparative
perspectives. Police, crime, justice and
dystopian dramas frequently place law and social attitudes to law centre-stage
in the delineation of national identity.
Television drama
may be perceived as a communicative event in which history is transformed into
myth through a stylised set of codes.
The transmission of coded messages about national identity, and their
interpretation (both hegemonic and oppositional) become particularly worthy of analysis
as the nation comes under strain through patterns of globalised and regional
integration coupled with acts of national resistance. Multiple genres of television drama provide
scope for the expression of national identity, including the use by period dramas
of creative nostalgia to represent the contemporary nation or the warnings to
the nation posed by science fiction television.
In all contexts the interplay between projections of national identity and
television’s treatment of race, class and gender warrants critical scrutiny.
Proposals for
20-minute papers are therefore invited for a symposium on 6 September 2019, to
be held in the University
of Westminster ’s historic
Regent Street
building just metres away from BBC headquarters. Possible subjects for papers might include,
but are by no means limited to:
- is national identity empirical or normative in television
drama?
- internet/social media amplification of debates on TV drama, law
and identity
- national identity on television as ideology
- depictions of trials and national identity
- national security dramas: ‘war against terrorism’, identity and
law(lessness)
- political dramas: uniform global elite or national diversity?
- fan responses to the portrayal of the nation
- globalisation/globalised law – depicted as threat to national
identity?
- feminist crime drama and national identity
- science fiction or dystopian fiction, law and national identity
- ‘heritage’ drama: commodification of (rose-tinted) ideas of
national identity for global consumption?
Abstracts should
be 250 words in length, accompanied by a 100-word biography of the author, and
sent to nicold@wmin.ac.uk by the deadline
of 1 February 2019.
Via @Doubledegree
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