Old Folks Never Die on TV: Representations of Corpses on American TV shows in the 21st Century

Authors

  • Tina Weber .

Abstract

Every day during prime time, millions of viewers can view corpses and experience visually various body parts. This article examines different aesthetic techniques used to represent corpses on television in fictional American programmes in the twenty-first century. The empirical data consist of fifteen different television shows. In this paper two of the shows, a relatively little-known documentary, Family Plots, and a popular fictional series, Six Feet Under, are compared in order to demonstrate contrasting aesthetic styles of representing the deceased. The analytical method consists of a pictorial analysis arising from a structural-hermeneutic approach and based on three classic methods of image interpretation. The theoretical framework is primarily concerned with the discourse on corpse representations on television, in sociology, and in cultural science. The findings will show specific constraints on the presentation of dead bodies, including condition and position, which can be identified as manifestations of a new taboo. Despite these new representations, dead bodies connected with disorder, movement, or illness are largely absent. This paper argues that these constraints serve to protect from any harm the classical Western image of the dead as a silent sleeping beauty

Author Biography

Tina Weber, .

Tina Weber is a sociologist currently researching the decline of hospital autopsies in a Volkswagen foundation funded research project ‘Death and Dead Bodies’. She completed her PhD thesis on representations of death in contemporary TV shows in the twenty-first century in April of 2010. Her research fields are the sociology of death and dying, religion, and violence.

Downloads

Published

2023-08-09