Regeneration Through Violence? The American Family in Ray Donovan and Big Little Lies

Zbigniew Mazur

Abstract


The aim of the paper is to assess the continuity of the mythical motifs of “regeneration through violence”, famously described by Richard Slotkin as “the structuring metaphor of the American experience”, in contemporary American popular culture. The article discusses the representations of family in two American television dramas: Showtime’s television crime drama series Ray Donovan (2013–2018) and HBO mini-series Big Little Lies (2017). The narrative analysis of the two shows reveals that both dramas creatively employ the theme of “regeneration through violence”. Although rooted in two different ideological foundations and different in their genres, both shows focus on violence as an underlining theme and the prime cause of the crises in the family. A model of the family framed within a paternalistic, neo-conservative discourse is offered in Ray Donovan. Its eponymous character is successful at solving problems of the LA rich and immoral elite, but hopeless in dealing with those created by his own  dysfunctional family. Big Little Lies tells the story of five women from northern California, members of an ostensibly liberal and progressive social elite, each of which is, however, troubled by the serious problems of their respective families. The analysis shows that although the narratives of both series are structured along the theme of “regeneration through violence”, their meanings are strikingly different from each other. Ray Donovan persistently points to the futility of the use of violence in its characters’ struggle to save and preserve the family, while the narrative of Big Little Lies, despite its progressive overtones, seems to imply that retributive violence can indeed have a cathartic and regenerative function.


Keywords


violence; regeneration through violence; American family; American TV dramas; Ray Donovan; Big Little Lies

Full Text:

PDF

References


BIBLIOGRAFIA PODMIOTOWA

Vallée, J.-M. (prod.) (2017–2018). Big Little Lies (TV series). HBO.

Zuriff, B., Gordon, M., Biderman, A. (prod.) (2013–2018). Ray Donovan (TV series), seasons 1–6. Showtime.

BIBLIOGRAFIA PRZEDMIOTOWA

Castleberry, GL. (2014). Revising the Western: Connecting Genre Rituals and American Western Revisionism in TV’s Sons of Anarchy. Cultural Studies ↔ Critical Methodologies, 14(3), pp. 269–278.

Durys, E. (2016). Kulturowy wymiar amerykańskiego kina policyjnego (Cultural Dimension of American Cop Cinema). In: T. Domański (ed.), Międzynarodowe studia polityczne i kulturowe wobec wyzwań współczesności (pp. 327–346). Łódź: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego.

Handley, W. (2002). Marriage, Violence, and the Nation in the American Literary West. New York: Cambridge University Press.

Lichtenfeld, E. (2004). Action Speaks Louder: Violence, Spectacle, and the American Action Movie. Westport & London: Prager.

Ligor, J. (2017). The Character of Anton Chigurh in the Coen Brothers No Country for Old Men as an Expression of Reflections on Evil and Violence. Społeczeństwo. Edukacja. Język, 5, pp. 73–86.

Mattes, A. (2014). Action without Regeneration: The Deracination of the American Action Hero in Michael Mann’s Heat. Journal of Popular Film and Television, 42(4), pp. 186–194.

Purse, L. (2011). Contemporary Action Cinema. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.

Slotkin, R. (1973). Regeneration through Violence: The Mythology of the American Frontier, 1600–1860. Middletown: Wesleyan University Press.

Slotkin, R. (1990). The Continuity of Forms: Myth and Genre in Warner Brothers’ The Charge of the Light Brigade. Representations, 29, pp. 1–23.

Slotkin, R. (2017). Thinking Mythologically: Black Hawk Down, the “Platoon Movie” and the War of Choice in Iraq. European Journal of American Studies, 12(2), pp. 1–18.

Tenga, A., Bassett, J. (2016) “You Kill or You Die, or You Die and You Kill”: Meaning and Violence in AMC’s The Walking Dead. The Journal of Popular Culture, 49(6), pp. 1280–1300.




DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17951/ff.2018.36.2.121-129
Date of publication: 2019-01-18 08:01:22
Date of submission: 2018-10-20 13:53:19


Statistics


Total abstract view - 1469
Downloads (from 2020-06-17) - PDF - 905

Indicators



Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Copyright (c) 2019

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.