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Downton Abbey
- Default Title
Description
Combining textual analysis with audience research and focusing primarily on audiences in the United States and India - both former British colonies - Khan poses critical questions surrounding the meaning of nostalgic performance, the growing prevalence of injustice-inspired critique, and the underlying motives for circulating an idealized, though irrecoverable, British imperial past. Examining the contemporary relevance of these picturesque representations, which reduce history to a spectacle, Khan juxtaposes the present-day media environment with that of legacy media and highlights the construction of culture and ideology at a juncture of major changes in production, distribution, and consumption of popular culture ushered by new communication technologies.
Khan posits that notwithstanding the drama's enthusiastic reception, it does not necessarily entail an endorsement of iniquitous socio-economic-political status quo within neoliberal democracies. Rather, this book demonstrates how, in the contexts of mounting employment insecurities and economic injustices, audiences seek stability and security as reflected in the deep bonds between employer and employee and in the ideals of Liberal Paternalism which animate Downton Abbey's dramatic universe. Ultimately, this book argues that although hegemonic ideology continues to be reconfigured and redeployed in diverse contexts for capitalistic gain, the popularity of the series is representative of both an affirmation and a critique of contemporary neoliberalism.
Product details
Number of Pages:
214
Release Date:
2026-02-05
Publication Date:
2025-11-27
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Academic
Languages:
Original:
English
ISBN10:
1793654735
ISBN13:
9781793654731
GPSR Manufacturer Reference:
Weight:
468 g
Height:
157 cm
Width:
235 cm
Thickness:
16 cm
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