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2016 | 6 | 227-244

Article title

In the Fleshand the Gothic Pharmacology of Everyday Life; or Into and Out of the Gothic

Authors

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
One of the key questions facing Gothic Studies today is that of its migration into and out of its once familiar generic or symbolic modes of representation. The BBC series In the Flesh addresses these concerns against the background of a neoliberal medical culture in which pharmaceutical treatments have become powerful tools of socio-economic normalization, either through inducing passivity or in heightening productivity, generating chemically adapted biomachines tuned to think and produce. But the pharmakon has always been a risky form of normalization, its poisonous mechanisms threatening to undo its helpful patterns by stealth. This essay discusses the pharmacological and medical contexts of the series in which zombies are subjected to medical management and normalized as “PDS sufferers,” thereby locating In the Flesh in terms of an already gothicized neoliberal pharmacology of everyday life. It also enquires how the proximity of the symbolic pharmacology of the series to neoliberal medical discourses and practices actually challenges traditional representational patterns of the Gothic and whether the Gothic can still have a role as an alternative cure to society’s ills.

Keywords

Year

Volume

6

Pages

227-244

Physical description

Dates

published
2016-11-01
online
2016-11-23

Contributors

author
  • University of Oxford

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.hdl_11089_20470
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