Jowett, L. (2016) ‘Centuries of evil… wacky sidekicks… yadda, yadda’: : vampire television, vampire time and the conventions of flashback. In: Jowett, L., Simmons, D. and Robinson, K. L. (eds.) Time on TV: Narrative Time, Time Travel and Time Travellers in Popular Television Culture :. London: I.B.Tauris. pp. 121-133.
Jowett_Lorna_Bloomsbury_2016_Centuries_of_evil_wacky_sidekicks_yadda_yadda_vampire_television_vampire_time ... (299kB) |
Item Type: | Book Section |
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Abstract: | TV, especially serial television drama has, according to Glen Creeber, “unparalleled temporal breadth” (2004: 19). Team this with the cultural icon of the ever-youthful, nearly immortal vampire, and time on vampire television becomes endless. Time, for vampires, works differently: they blur boundaries between age and youth. The age of the vampire also allows for epic scale. This is not time travel in the science fiction sense, but travel through the never-ending undead time of a vampire’s existence, or what one character from Angel cynically summarises as “centuries of evil… wacky sidekicks… yadda, yadda” (Lilah Morgan in “Lullaby” Angel 3.9). This paper examines how vampire television from Dark Shadows to Being Human merges existing conventions for presenting time alongside established vampire tropes. The endless seriality of a soap opera like Dark Shadows continually requires new material and extended flashbacks provide this, adding novelty to the ongoing drama, filling out character backstory, and heightening our sense of Barnabas Collins as an immortal vampire. In more recent drama, flashbacks enable character development on a new scale, as well as providing a dynamic sense of change and moral complexity in shows like Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel, which focus on redemption. The flashback in vampire TV is also examined from the angles of history (inserting fictional characters into well-known events), memory (point of view), and aesthetics (period drama, material realism). Vampire TV offers a unique opportunity to analyse how conventions of flashback usually work in serial drama, and how they compare with other representations of time on television. |
Uncontrolled Keywords: | Vampires, television studies, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, The Vampire Diaries, Being Human(UK) |
Creators: | Jowett, Lorna |
Editors: | Jowett, Lorna, Simmons, David and Robinson, Kevin Lee |
Publisher: | I.B.Tauris |
Faculties, Divisions and Institutes: |
Faculties > Faculty of Education & Humanities > English and Creative Writing Research Centres > Centre for Critical and Creative Writing |
Date: | 30 June 2016 |
Date Type: | Publication |
Page Range: | pp. 121-133 |
Title of Book: | Time on TV: Narrative Time, Time Travel and Time Travellers in Popular Television Culture : |
Series Name: | Investigating cult TV |
Place of Publication: | London |
Number of Pages: | 13 |
Language: | English |
ISBN: | 9781784530136 |
Status: | Published / Disseminated |
Refereed: | No |
Related URLs: | |
URI: | http://nectar.northampton.ac.uk/id/eprint/11722 |
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