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Volume 5, December 2004
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Identifying
with Dexter |
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JANNA HOUWEN
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Leiden University
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Abstract |
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Many contemporary high quality TV series tend to enable
identification with protagonists who engage in morally
dubious or outright abject acts. This essay takes Showtime’s
series Dexter as a pre-eminent and extreme example of this
tendency, and explores how the viewer’s identification with
the serial-killing protagonist of the show is constructed
and altered throughout several seasons of the series. In
order to analyze the specific relation between Dexter and
its audience, this essay first examines the more general
possibility television series to produce firm identification
of viewers with protagonists by comparing the format of the
television series to two media that can be understood as its
predecessors: literature and film.
Keywords:
Television series, identification, Dexter |
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