Debats. Revista de cultura, poder i societat (Feb 2017)

Imagining the Nation through Television Fiction: Memory, Proximity and Daily Life

  • Àlvar Peris Blanes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.28939/iam.debats-en.2016-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 0

Abstract

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This paper reflects on the importance of television (especially TV fiction) in the imaginary of Nations. With this end in view, we first look at the role played by television as an instrument of socialization, as well as its ability to consolidate and naturalise an imaginary based on the dissemination of various ideological representations of reality. Second, we explore the ritual function of television and its incarnation in daily life, routines, and the family setting of the broad masses. It is a dimension that studies on the nation and nationalism are increasingly taking into account as central factors in the process of national construction — especially regarding the fostering of a sense of belonging and in imagining an abstract community. Last but not least, we focus on television fiction because it makes up the lion’s share of the programmes in most TV stations and is probably the most relevant narrative we can find in contemporary societies. Among the various discursive strategies shaping this definition of the nation, we examine the construction of the story of the nation’s past and present (in which the stories are set within nationally-defined regions and spheres) and the tactical resort to cultural and linguistic proximity

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