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Idealized Nationalism in Downton Abbey
Author(s) -
Christa Rydeberg Aakjær
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
leviathan
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2446-3981
DOI - 10.7146/lev.v0i3.107775
Subject(s) - nationalism , popularity , recreation , national identity , identity (music) , cultural heritage , sociology , aesthetics , history , art , political science , law , politics , archaeology
With the Downton Abbey series as a starting point, this study examines how fictional media is a new source of renegotiating national identity, in this case Englishness. A close analysis of Downton Abbey and similar cultural phenomena shows how heritage film modify and idealize certain aspects and values of history to alter and ultimately rewrite the memory of history. Different definitions of nationalism and identity are explored to lay the basis of a discussion of why Downton Abbey appeared when it did and how fictional productions of history and culture might key to the recreation of contemporary cultural identity. Thus, this article will reveal the connection between the popularity of heritage productions and their impact on the cultivation of cultural identities and national sentiments.

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