Television With Stanley Cavell In Mind

Television With Stanley Cavell In Mind

Television With Stanley Cavell In Mind

Television With Stanley Cavell In Mind

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Overview

This collection of new work on the philosophical importance of television starts from a model for reading films proposed by Stanley Cavell, whereby film in its entirety-actors and production included-brings its own intelligence to its realization. In turn, this intelligence educates us as viewers, leading us to recognize and appreciate our individual cinephilic tastes, and to know ourselves and each other better. This reading is even more valid for TV series. Yet, in spite of the progress of film-philosophy, there has been a paucity of concurrent analysis of the ethical stakes, the modes of expressiveness, and the moral education involved in television series. Perhaps most conspicuously, there has been a lack of focus on the experience of the viewer. Cavell highlighted popular cinema's capacity to create a common culture for millions. This power has become dispersed across other bodies of work and practices, most notably TV series, which have largely appropriated the responsibility of widening the perspectives of their publics, a role once associated with the silver screen. Just as Cavell's reading of films involved moral perfectionism in its intent, this project is also perfectionist, extending a similar aesthetic and ethical method to readings of the small screen. Because TV series are works that are public and thus shared, and often global in reach, they fulfil an educational role-whether intended or not-and one that enables viewers to anchor and appreciate the value of their everyday experiences. Contributions from: William Rothman, Martin Shuster, Elisabeth Bronfen, Hugo Clemot, David La Rocca, Jeroen Gerrits, Stephen Mulhall, Michelle Devereaux, Thibaut de Saint-Maurice, Hent de Vries, Catherine Wheatley, Byron Davies, Sandra Laugier, Paul Standish, Robert Sinnerbrink.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781804130186
Publisher: University of Exeter Press
Publication date: 05/30/2023
Pages: 348
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.17(h) x (d)

About the Author

David La Rocca studied philosophy, film, rhetoric, and religion at Buffalo, Berkeley, Vanderbilt, and Harvard. He is the author or contributing editor of more than a dozen books, including a suite of volumes in film-philosophy: The Philosophy of Charlie Kaufman (2011), The Philosophy of War Films (2014), The Philosophy of Documentary Film: Image, Sound, Fiction, Truth (2017). More recently he edited The Thought of Stanley Cavell and Cinema: Turning Anew to the Ontology of Film a Half-Century after The World Viewed (2020), Inheriting Stanley Cavell: Memories, Dreams, Reflections (2020), and Movies with Stanley Cavell in Mind (2021). Sandra Laugier, a former student at the Ecole normale superieure and at Harvard University, is Professor of Philosophy at Universite Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne. She has published extensively on ordinary language philosophy (Wittgenstein, Austin, Cavell), moral and political philosophy, gender studies and the ethics of care, popular film, and TV series, and is the author of over 30 books in total, including Why We Need Ordinary Language Philosophy (2013), and Politics of the Ordinary: Care, Ethics, and Forms of Life (2020). She is a columnist at the French Journal Liberation, and is the translator of Stanley Cavell's work in French.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements Contributors Introduction: The Fact and Fiction of Television: Stanley Cavell and the Terms of Television Philosophy DAVID La ROCCA and SANDRA LAUGIER PART I: NEW TELEVISION 1 Justifying Justified WILLIAM ROTHMAN 2 'You Get Paid for Pain': Kingdom and New Television MARTIN SHUSTER 3 To See and to Stop: The Problem of Abdication in Succession ELISABETH BRONFEN 4 When TV is on TV: Metatelevision and the Art of Watching TV with the Royal Family in The Crown DAVID La ROCCA PART II: BIG PERFECTIONISM ON THE SMALL SCREEN 5 It's My Party and I'll Die Even If I Don't Want To: Repetition, Acknowledgment, and Cavellian Perfectionism in Russian Doll MICHELLE DEVEREAUX 6 'Nobody's Perfect': Moral Imperfectionism in Ozark HENT de VRIES 7 A Zigzag of a Hundred Tacks: Narrative Complexity in The Good Place CATHERINE WHEATLEY 8 Im/Moral Perfectionism: On TV's Two Worlds JERŒN GERRITS PART III: EVERYDAY EDUCATION 9 The Sublime and the American Dream in Fargo HUGO CLEMOT 10 TV Time, Recurrence, and the Situation of the Spectator: An Approach via Stanley Cavell, Raul Ruiz, and Ruiz's Late Chilean Series Litoral (2008) BYRON DAVIES 11 Education about Trust in Homeland THIBAUT de SAINT MAURICE 12 Small Acts PAUL STANDISH PART IV: POPULAR TV AND ITS GENRES 13 The Event of Television: Sitcoms, Superheroes, and Wanda Vision STEPHEN MULHALL 14 Love, Remarriage, and The Americans SANDRA LAUGIER 15 True Detective: Existential Scepticism and Television Crime Drama ROBERT SINNERBRINK Index
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