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‘A world where nothing is solved’: Investigating the Anthropocene in True Detective
Author(s) -
Rob Coley
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
the journal of popular television
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.132
H-Index - 2
eISSN - 2046-987X
pISSN - 2046-9861
DOI - 10.1386/jptv.5.2.135_1
Subject(s) - anthropocene , nothing , dualism , anthropocentrism , drama , humanism , agency (philosophy) , epistemology , subject (documents) , determinism , aesthetics , history , environmental ethics , sociology , philosophy , literature , art , computer science , theology , library science
In the HBO series True Detective (2014–present), the material world is no mere backdrop. It is not a neutral geography against which the theatre of human drama takes place, nor does it simply take the form of a psychological landscape, understood as an expression of the interior terrain of the show’s protagonists. This particular crime drama does not rely on the stabilizing dualism of exterior/interior, nor does it concern itself with an interaction between these apparently separate realms. Instead, True Detective deals with the consequences of living as part of a world in which such dualisms – and the humanist assumptions upon which they are based – are subject to mass extinction, a world in which a long-held belief in the separability of culture and nature, of free will and determinism, of the organic and the technological, is no longer tenable. Here, far from peripheral to practices of detection and investigation, the material world is an active agent inseparably entangled in such practices. In this article I contend that True Detective maps present trauma concerning a geohistorical period scientists have designated the Anthropocene, and, in doing so, radically exploits a crisis in the anthropocentric conventions of the genre

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