The Honest and the Bent: an investigation of Representation and White Hegemony in Mercurio’s TV series Line of Duty

dc.contributor.authorKrupke, Sylvia
dc.contributor.departmentUniversity of Gothenburg/Department of Cultural Scienceseng
dc.contributor.departmentGöteborgs universitet/Institutionen för kulturvetenskaperswe
dc.date.accessioned2025-02-03T14:11:10Z
dc.date.available2025-02-03T14:11:10Z
dc.date.issued2025-02-03
dc.description.abstractThis essay analyses how whiteness is portrayed and its hegemony reinforced through the practice of representation in Jed Mercurio’s highly acclaimed TV-series Line of Duty. It analyses scenes from the first season using Sara Ahmed’s affect theory and her extension of phenomenology, along with Roland Barthes definition of myth, and demonstrates that the series contributes to the idea of whiteness as universal and ordinary. Looking at characters, symbols and dialogues, the essay shows that by privileging one perspective over the other and representing a familiar polarity of the foreign threat and white hero, Line of Duty reinforces white hegemony at the same time as it rejects common stereotypes.sv
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2077/84825
dc.language.isoengsv
dc.setspec.uppsokHumanitiesTheology
dc.subjectwhiteness, representation, screenwriting, phenomenology, affect theory, myth, Line of Duty, TV, Britishsv
dc.titleThe Honest and the Bent: an investigation of Representation and White Hegemony in Mercurio’s TV series Line of Dutysv
dc.typeText
dc.type.degreeStudent essay
dc.type.uppsokM2

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