Bandersnatched: Infrastructure and Acquiescence in Black Mirror
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-4-2020
Publication Title
Critical Studies in Media Communication
First page number:
1
Last page number:
14
Abstract
We argue that Black Mirror delivers an amplified experiential analog to the structured excesses of digital techno-culture, affectively “inoculating” viewers with the poison of dark futurity. Through critical examinations of “The National Anthem,” “Hated in the Nation,” “The Waldo Moment,” and ||Bandersnatch|| we track how Black Mirror actualizes the entanglements of digital agency and mediated acquiescence in its viewing experience. Bandersnatch, in particular, offers performative infrastructurality as a mode of experiential critique, thus exemplifying Black Mirror’s tendency of prodding audiences into contemplating the terms and conditions of their own digitized interpassivity. Ultimately, we argue, Black Mirror delivers its viewers to a position of virtualized agency engendered by the vague power of mediated acquiescence.
Keywords
Black Mirror; Bandersnatch; Netflix; Algorithmic acquienscence; Interpassivity; Infrastructure
Disciplines
Communication Technology and New Media | Film and Media Studies
Language
English
Repository Citation
Conley, D.,
Burroughs, B.
(2020).
Bandersnatched: Infrastructure and Acquiescence in Black Mirror.
Critical Studies in Media Communication
1-14.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15295036.2020.1718173