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The Killing (Paperback)
Loot Price: R646
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The Killing (Paperback)
Series: TV Milestones Series
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Although it lasted only four seasons and just forty-four episodes,
The Killing attracted considerable critical notice and sparked an
equally lively debate about its distinctive style and innovative
approach to the television staple of the police procedural. A
product of the turn toward revisionist "quality" television in the
post-broadcast era, The Killing also stands as a pioneering example
of the changing gender dynamics of early twenty-first-century
television. Author John Alberti looks at how the show's focus
shifts the police procedural away from the idea that solving the
mystery of whodunit means resolving the crime, and toward dealing
with the ongoing psychological aftermath of crime and violence on
social and family relationships. This attention to what creator and
producer Veena Sud describes as the "real cost" of murder defines
The Killing as a milestone feminist revision of the crime thriller
and helps explain why it has provoked such strong critical
reactions and fan loyalty. Alberti examines the history of women
detectives in the television police procedural, paying particular
attention to how the cultural formation of the traditionally male
noir detective has shaped that history. Through a careful
comparison with the Danish original, Forbrydelsen, and a
season-by-season overview of the series, Alberti argues that The
Killing rewrites the masculine lone wolf detective - a self-styled
social outsider who sees the entanglements of relationships as
threats to his personal autonomy - of the classic noir. Instead,
lead detective Sarah Linden, while wary of the complications of
personal and social attachments, still recognises their
psychological and ethical inescapability and necessity. In the
final chapter, the author looks at how the show's move to
ever-expanding niche markets and multi-viewing options, along with
an increase in feminist reconstructions of various television
genres, makes The Killing a perfect example of cult television that
lends itself to binge-watching in the digital era. Television
studies scholars and fans of police procedurals should own this
insightful volume.
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