Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: http://hdl.handle.net/10259/4720
Título
The discourse of fear in american TV fiction: a furedian reading of person of interest
Publicado en
Complutense Journal of English Studies. 2016, V. 24, p. 7-23
Editorial
Universidad Complutense de Madrid
Fecha de publicación
2016
ISSN
2386-3935
DOI
10.5209/CJES.51449
Abstract
Inserted in the ongoing discussion about the post-9/11 cultural archive, this paper analyzes
the TV series Person of Interest (CBS, 2011–2016), created by Jonathan Nolan, through Frank
Furedi’s theories about the discursive formation of fear as presented in his texts Politics of Fear.
Beyond Left and Right (2005), Invitation to Terror. The Expanding Empire of the Unknown (2007),
The Only Thing We Have to Fear Is the ‘Culture of Fear’ Itself (2007), and Precautionary Culture and
the Rise of Possibilistic Risk Assessment (2009). We make these works converse with several
American and European sociological views, offering a transnational perspective over the issues at
hand. With an interdisciplinary approach and with a critical-cultural methodology supported by
selected instances from the first four seasons of the show, we argue that, despite timid hints at a
critique of the flawed American democracy, the show feeds into an ever-growing array of media
proposals of a citizenship based on precaution, contributing to the reinforcement of the post-9/11
atmosphere of fear through a logic predicated on inevitability and a deflated sense of agency on the
part of common people that discourages practices of resistance.
Palabras clave
Post-9/11 TV
fear
precautionary culture
inevitability
agency
Materia
Communication
Comunicación
Versión del editor
Collections