7 research outputs found
I feel Canadian : affective practices of nation and nationalism on Canadian television
In this dissertation, I examine how ideas about the nation are produced via affect,
especially Canadian television's role in this discursive construction. I analyze
Canadian television as a surface of emergence for nationalist sentiment. Within
this commercial medium, U.S. dominance, Quebec separatism, and the
immigrant are set in an oppositional relationship to Canadian nationalism.
Working together, certain institutions such as the law and the corporation,
exercise authority through what I call 'technologies of affect': speech-acts, music,
editing. I argue that the instability of Canadian identity is re-stabilized by a
hyperbolic affective mode that is frequently produced through consumerism.
Delimited within a fairly narrow timeframe (1995 -2002), the dissertation's
chronological starting point is the Quebec Referendum of October 1995. It
concludes at another site of national and international trauma: media coverage of
September 11, 2001 and its aftermath. Moving from traumatic point to traumatic
point, this dissertation focuses on moments in televised Canadian history that
ruptured, or tried to resolve, the imagined community of nation, and the idea of a
national self and national others. I examine television as a marker of an affective
Canadian national space, one that promises an idea of 'home'. I discuss several
overlapping texts: the television programs themselves, their political and cultural
contexts, and their convergence with other forms of media. More specifically, I
privilege television's speech acts, its generic repetitions and compulsive returns,
particularly in the context of recent trauma theory. As part of the larger text of
television, I also ponder the flow- between television and body, between
program and commercial, between TV, telephone and internet, and between
television and the spaces of home, the workplace, and the street. Using an
interdisciplinary methodology informed by post-structuralist thought, and a writing
style inflected by autobiographical modes, I argue that collective affect frequently
operates in relation to media representations of nationalism, producing national
practices framed by a television screen.Graduate and Postdoctoral StudiesGraduat