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[Commlist] CFP The Ethics of TV series' aesthetics
Tue Oct 04 21:34:33 GMT 2022
*/The Ethics of TV series’ Aesthetics/*
**
*Conference, October 5th and 6th, 2023*
Université Paul-Valéry Montpellier 3
RIRRA21, EMMA, IUF
Organization board: Claire Cornillon, Sarah Hatchuel, Monica Michlin,
David Roche,
Advisory board: Julien Achemchame (Université Paul-Valéry Montpellier
3), Luca Barra (Università di Bologna), Paola Brembilla (Università di
Bologna), Samuel Chambers (Johns Hopkins University), Claire Cornillon
(Université de Nîmes), Florent Favard (Université de Lorraine), Sarah
Hatchuel (Université Paul-Valéry Montpellier 3), Monica Michlin
(Université Paul-Valéry Montpellier 3), Ariane Hudelet (Université
Paris-Cité), David Roche (Université Paul-Valéry Montpellier 3, Institut
Universitaire de France), Sarah Sepulchre (Université catholique de
Louvain), Guillaume Soulez (Université Sorbonne-Nouvelle)
In her book /Nos vies en series/ (2019) and an issue of /Open
Philosophy/ (2021-22), Sandra Laugier invites us to understand how
television shows, through their duration and the various kinds of
attachment they elicit, may educate viewers morally and make them
attentive to what seems to be unremarkable within ordinary life. Her
work focuses on situations, dialogues, gestures, dilemmas, identity
politics and (political or moral) choices made by (groups of)
characters, but it does not necessarily take into account the way
specific narrative structures may encourage spectators to adopt a
particular ethical view. Similarly, Skorin-Kapov (2019) and Watson and
Arp (2011) engage with ethical issues through film or television; but do
not address the very ethics of film or television.
The aim of this conference is precisely to focus on the ethics involved
in the aesthetics and narration of tv series. The logics of seriality
are indeed multiple and historicized: they establish models that are
both inscribed in patterns recognizable from one series to another and
specific to a single series. Yet these models produce meaning,
particularly in ethical terms.
From formula to semi-serialized or serialized shows, each type of
audiovisual serial narrations opens up a specific space for ideological
and ethical negotiation, for instance regarding the status of
characters, the interaction of characters with various forms of space,
the show’s inscription in time, the relationship between the narrative
structure and a logic of causality and/or contingency.
Even if semi-serialized shows construct strong serial arcs, they seem to
maintain the importance of the episode as a metaphor of human beings in
their very individualities and specificities (Cornillon/Hatchuel 2020).
For instance, in /E.R./, NBC, 1994-2009, it is precisely through the
time devoted to everyday life, rather than to the overarching
storylines, that patients get to exist within the diegesis. The very
fact that the series creates a balance between serialized storylines and
formulaic ones asserts an ideological position regarding alterity and
empathy. In the space of the episode, what we already know (about the
doctors or the nurses) and what we do not know (about the new patients)
are connected: we are encouraged to care for “others” in order to
evolve. In /Person of Interest /(CBS, 2011-2016), the fight between the
two super-computers reflects the tension between the two major dynamics
at work in serial writing – that which favours the macro/serial arc with
its recurring, evolving heroes and that which concentrates on the
micro/formulaic arc hosting many non-recurring characters, for instance
in the form of guest stars.While the series unfolds serial arcs that
build a true mythology for the series, /Person of Interest/ also
preserves its most formulaic aspects. In its last season, at a point
when the heroes would like to fight exclusively against computer
Samaritan, the Machine keeps sending them the Social Security numbers of
unknown individuals whose lives may be in danger. Our desire to
experience a serial narrative freed from the usual “case of the week”,
is thus constantly frustrated. But the strength of the series is that it
inspires within us a commitment and attachment to the formulaic format,
because if we reject the numbers, if we disparage the week’s “person of
interest”, we become exactly like Samaritan, endorsing a dehumanizing
ideology in which some individuals “don’t count” or count less than
others. /Person of Interest/ thus creates a tension between our wish to
see the Machine evolve (and the narrative become more complex) and the
necessary awareness that each life (each episode) is invaluable. The
show appears, therefore, as an ethical justification of formulaic
repetition versus the powerful forces of evolving seriality.In this
case, the “persons of interest” come to represent and anchor the viewers
themselves within the story world. In this process, the expression
“person of interest” is invested in a new meaning: beyond the usual
meaning of “person the police is trying to locate” or “potential
suspect”, it can signify, in the context of the series, “person of true
interest to us”, “person that we (must) care about”, “person that we
cannot give up on”.
What about other serial forms? To what extent is a series or an episode
driven by the aim of a certain conception of a “good life” (Taylor 1989;
Ricoeur 1990, 1995)? What ethical positioning can be implied by such and
such variations on the soap opera’s extreme serialization or on the
sitcom's conditions of production? How can we situate ourselves in a
story where everything always starts from scratch at the episode level?
What do tensions between narrative forms (e.g. serial versus formulaic)
within a series say about its ethical project? What does the evolution
of aesthetics and/or narrative structure within the same series reveal
about its ethical position? How can power relations, violence and
voyeurism be treated in a particular serial aesthetic? How can series by
the same showrunner respond to each other on an ethical level – for
instance, is /Better Call Saul/ an ethical response to /Breaking Bad/?
Is /The Leftovers/ a cynical nod to the disappointed audience of /LOST/?
In the wake of GUEST's work, we are soliciting by *30 January 2023*
proposals for 30-minute papers (abstract of 300 words with a
biographical note of 100 words to be sent to
(sarah.hatchuel /at/ univ-montp3.fr) <mailto:(sarah.hatchuel /at/ univ-montp3.fr)>and
(claire.cornillon /at/ unimes.fr) <mailto:(claire.cornillon /at/ unimes.fr)>) on one
or more series, in a pluri- and interdisciplinary perspective. The "tv
series" object must however remain at the centre of the analyses. The
choice of less studied series, such as older series, will be
particularly appreciated.
References
Chambers, Samuel Allen (2009). /The Queer Politics of Television/.
London: I. B. Tauris, coll. « Reading contemporary television ».
Cornillon, Claire (2017). “La fin d’/Angel/ ou le primat de
l’épisodique”. /La Forge numérique/ (MSH Caen),
http://www.unicaen.fr/recherche/mrsh/forge/4398
<http://www.unicaen.fr/recherche/mrsh/forge/4398>.
Cornillon, Claire (2018). “Opening credits”. /Episodique/.
https://episodique.hypotheses.org/158
<https://episodique.hypotheses.org/158>.
Cornillon, Claire (2019). “La forme semi-feuilletonnante formulaire :
l’exemple d’/Ally McBeal/”. /TV/Series /15,
https://journals.openedition.org/tvseries/3400
<https://journals.openedition.org/tvseries/3400>.
Cornillon, Claire and Sarah Hatchuel (2020). “Analysing Semi-Serialized
Television Fictions: the Ethical Stakes of Narrative Structures”,
/SERIES/, VI.1, 57-64, https://doi.org/10.6092/issn.2421-454x/10393
<https://doi.org/10.6092/issn.2421-454x/10393>.
Dunleavy, Trishia (2018). /Complex Serial Drama and Multiplatform
Television/. New York: Routledge.
Esquenazi, Jean-Pierre (2017). /Éléments pour l’analyse des séries/.
Paris: L’Harmattan.
Favard, Florent (2018). /Ecrire une série tv: La promesse du
dénouement/. Tours: Presses universitaires François Rabelais.
Glevarec, Hervé (2012). /La Sériephilie : Sociologie d’un attachement
culturel/. Paris: Ellipses.
Hatchuel, Sarah (2018). “Nous vivons dans un rêve genré : ce que /Twin
Peaks/ fait aux femmes.” In Sarah Hatchuel (ed.), /Twin Peaks: à
l’intérieur du rêve/. Lormont: Le Bord de l’eau, 187-204.
Hatchuel, Sarah and Pacôme Thiellement (2019). /The Leftovers : le
troisième côté du miroir/. Paris: Playlist Society.
Laugier, Sandra (2014). “L’éthique comme attention à ce qui compte.”
In//Yves Citton (ed.), /L’Economie de l’attention/. Paris: La Découverte.
Laugier, Sandra (2019). /Nos vies en séries/. Paris: Climats.
Laugier Sandra, ed. (2021-22). “Ethics and Politics of TV Series”, /Open
Philosophy/, https://www.degruyter.com/journal/key/opphil/5/1/html
<https://www.degruyter.com/journal/key/opphil/5/1/html>.
Lifschutz, Vladimir (2018). /This is the end: Finir une série tv/.
Tours: Presses universitaires François Rabelais.
Mittell, Jason (2015). /Complex TV: The Poetics of Contemporary
Television Storytelling/. New York and London: New York University Press.
Ricœur, Paul (1990). /Soi-même comme un autre/. Paris: Seuil.
Ricoeur, Paul (1995). /Le Juste/. Paris: Esprit.
Sinnerbrink, Robert (2016). /Cinematic Ethics: Exploring Ethical
Experience through Film/. London: Routledge.
Soulez, Guillaume (2013). “La délibération des images. Vers une nouvelle
pragmatique du cinéma et de l’audiovisuel”. /Communica//tion &
langages/, 176, 3‑32.
Skorin-Kapov, Jadranka (2019). /Professional and Business Ethics Through
Film: The Allure of Cinematic Presentation and Critical Thinking/. Cham.
Taylor, Charles (1989). /Sources of the Self: The Making of the Modern
Identity/. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Watson Carlin, Jamie and Robert Arp (2011). /What’s Good on TV?/:
/Understanding Ethics Through Television/. New York.//
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