Black Mirror, Mediated Affect and the Political
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-27-2019
Publication Title
Culture, Theory and Critique
First page number:
1
Last page number:
15
Abstract
Black Mirror combines sensation and critique in an affective formalism that, we argue, yields a proliferation of possible viewer responses. Our analysis focuses on this unique combination of affect and form, in order to examine the relations between mediated affect and the question of the political. Through its refrain of mediated publicity as the tragedy of the viewing commons, Black Mirror offers a pointed social critique realised through narrative strategies of inoculation and traumatised witnessing. We argue that Black Mirror’s signature narrative tactic, the traumatic twist, yields a proliferation of possible viewer responses that exceed the easy parameters of acceptance and rejection; and we suggest that the question of the political is addressed through Black Mirror’s multiplication of ‘maybe’.
Keywords
Television; Reality; Reality television
Disciplines
Film and Media Studies
Language
English
Repository Citation
Conley, D. S.,
Burroughs, B.
(2019).
Black Mirror, Mediated Affect and the Political.
Culture, Theory and Critique
1-15.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14735784.2019.1583116