Academic Journal

I Used to Think We Were the Same Person: Disrupting the Ideal Nuclear Family Myth through Incest, Adultery and Gendered Violence in Taboo (2017-)

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: I Used to Think We Were the Same Person: Disrupting the Ideal Nuclear Family Myth through Incest, Adultery and Gendered Violence in Taboo (2017-)
المؤلفون: Pedro Mustieles, Leopoldina
المصدر: Pedro Mustieles, Leopoldina 2023 'I Used to Think We Were the Same Person:' Disrupting the Ideal Nuclear Family Myth through Incest, Adultery and Gendered Violence in Taboo (2017-) Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses 38 23 41
بيانات النشر: Universidad de Alicante
سنة النشر: 2024
المجموعة: Universitat de València: Roderic - Repositorio de contenido libre
مصطلحات موضوعية: sèries de televisió, violència de gènere
الوصف: The nuclear family consolidated its social status as the institution upholding the national, capitalist and moral values of Western societies in the long nineteenth century (Kohlke and Gutleben 2010, 1). Consequently, neo-Victorian literary and screen texts often try to challenge the idealised conceptualization of this institution by bringing to the fore its potential dysfunctionalities, such as monstrous or negligent parents, domestic violence, incest or adultery. This is the case of the TV series Taboo (2017-), which portrays a dysfunctional family whose foundations are based on colonialism, patriarchal violence and Oedipal relations. In this article, I examine Taboo as a neo-Victorian narrative of family trauma, which foregrounds and criticizes gendered violence, a phenomenon that was silenced in nineteenth-century literary and historical records (Lawson and Shakinovsky 2012a, 1). Moreover, I also scrutinise the incest trope, following Llewellyn's three-fold approach (2010), based on a triangulation between ethics, aesthetics and psychoanalysis. Finally, I consider how Taboo reproduces the most characteristic traits of nineteenth-century adultery novels, so as to expose the sexual dissatisfaction of its female protagonist, Zilpha Delaney, and her desire to escape from her abusive and oppressive husband. As I show in this article, Taboo manages to disrupt the myth of the nuclear family as a natural and indisputable moralising institution. Likewise, at first, the series shows potential feminist and post-colonial drives, as it attempts to denounce nineteenth-century imperialist and misogynistic ideologies within the family. However, Taboo fails to grant its heroine independence and female empowerment in the end. This is so because it replicates the ending of nineteenth-century adultery novels, where the adulterous wife committed suicide after being rejected by her lover.
نوع الوثيقة: article in journal/newspaper
وصف الملف: application/pdf
اللغة: English
تدمد: 0214-4808
Relation: Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses, 2023, vol. 38, p. 23-41; Pedro, D. (2023). “I Used to Think We Were the Same Person:” Disrupting the Ideal Nuclear Family Myth through Incest, Adultery and Gendered Violence in Taboo (2017-). En Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses (Issue 38, p. 23). Universidad de Alicante Servicio de Publicaciones. https://doi.org/10.14198/raei.2023.38.02; https://hdl.handle.net/10550/96880; 164656
DOI: 10.14198/raei.2023.38.02
الاتاحة: https://hdl.handle.net/10550/96880
https://doi.org/10.14198/raei.2023.38.02
Rights: open access
رقم الانضمام: edsbas.3D60897D
قاعدة البيانات: BASE
الوصف
تدمد:02144808
DOI:10.14198/raei.2023.38.02