Top Banner
Dr Ross P. Garner Department of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies Cardiff University @DefConG
7

Dr Ross P. Garner Department of Journalism, Media …orca.cf.ac.uk/52752/2/Garner nostalgias.pdf · Dr Ross P. Garner Department of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies Cardiff

Sep 19, 2018

Download

Documents

trinhphuc
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Dr Ross P. Garner Department of Journalism, Media …orca.cf.ac.uk/52752/2/Garner nostalgias.pdf · Dr Ross P. Garner Department of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies Cardiff

Dr Ross P. Garner

Department of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies

Cardiff University

@DefConG

Page 2: Dr Ross P. Garner Department of Journalism, Media …orca.cf.ac.uk/52752/2/Garner nostalgias.pdf · Dr Ross P. Garner Department of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies Cardiff

Social Constructionism and Nostalgia Nostalgia’s different

manifestations: Aesthetic style. Memory. Emotion.

Social constructionism:

Rejecting “the positivist position …[where] language is unproblematically representational, a mirror of ontological reality” (Ray 2000: 26)

Extending Boym’s idea – nostalgia as “a historical emotion” (2001: xvi)

Page 3: Dr Ross P. Garner Department of Journalism, Media …orca.cf.ac.uk/52752/2/Garner nostalgias.pdf · Dr Ross P. Garner Department of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies Cardiff

Social Constructionism and Nostalgia Nostalgia as a discourse:

Previous allusions – Kuhn (2002), Keightley (2010).

Features of nostalgia’s “interpretive repertoire” (Edley 2001: 198): “it is always the adoration of the past that triumphs over

lamentation for the present” (Davis 1979: 16) “[u]ncertainty and insecurity in present circumstances create

fertile ground for a sentimental longing for the past, or for a past fondly reconstructed out of selectively idealised features” (Keightley 2006: 925)

Expressions of nostalgia mobilising a “regressive narrative …depict[ing] a continued downward slide” (Gergen 2001: 254).

Page 4: Dr Ross P. Garner Department of Journalism, Media …orca.cf.ac.uk/52752/2/Garner nostalgias.pdf · Dr Ross P. Garner Department of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies Cardiff

Primeval (ITV/Impossible Pictures 2007-11)

Page 5: Dr Ross P. Garner Department of Journalism, Media …orca.cf.ac.uk/52752/2/Garner nostalgias.pdf · Dr Ross P. Garner Department of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies Cardiff

Primeval (ITV/Impossible Pictures 2007-11) Primeval, Genre and

Nostalgia: Employing conventions

of the “temporal contrast” (Burling 2006: 8) time travel narrative:

Constructing ‘societal nostalgia’…

…or, more specifically, ‘present-orientated nostalgia’ (see Garner 2012)?

Page 6: Dr Ross P. Garner Department of Journalism, Media …orca.cf.ac.uk/52752/2/Garner nostalgias.pdf · Dr Ross P. Garner Department of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies Cardiff

Primeval (ITV/Impossible Pictures 2007-11) Primeval, nostalgic discourse and the televisual

context:

Grainge (2000) – difference between nostalgic ‘moods’ and ‘modes’.

The context of ITV:

Budgetary considerations.

ITV’s imagined audience and intended market position.

Scheduling:

Saturday evenings = family audiences (see Johnson 2005: 133).

OFCOM (2008) guidelines concerning child audiences.

Page 7: Dr Ross P. Garner Department of Journalism, Media …orca.cf.ac.uk/52752/2/Garner nostalgias.pdf · Dr Ross P. Garner Department of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies Cardiff

Conclusions In summary:

Discussions of nostalgia need to move beyond solely redeeming certain (ideologically salient) manifestations.

Social constructionist approach = nostalgia as discourse; shaped by contextual factors.

Case of Primeval – impact of various institutional factors shape its discourse of nostalgia.