Serial Pleasures: The Influence of Television on the Victorian Novel

1 Brandeis University. John Plotz is Professor of English at Brandeis University, specializing in Victorian literature and the novel. Plotz is the author of The Crowd: British Literature and Public Politics (California, 2000) and Portable Property: Victorian Culture on the Move (Princeton, 2008). His current project is Semi-Detached: The Aesthetics of Partial Absorption. He was a Guggenheim Foundation Fellow in 2011-12, and his first children’s book, Time and the Tapestry: A William Morris Adventure is forthcoming in 2014.

Abstract

The contemporary success of serial television as a dominant long-form narrative artwork presents both perils and possibilities for critics interested in analogous forms in previous eras. TV dramas that viewers can follow from season to season generate a sustained, often years-long, engagement between viewer and depicted world, a very different relationship between viewer and artwork from that which governed viewer relations to pre-TV Hollywood film—or indeed to the Victorian novel, even when serialized. Broad issues of contingency and intention, as well as more nuanced questions of ensemble participation and commercial broadcasting logic separate serial TV from the long-form narratives of the nineteenth century. In offering up parallels between how serialization worked in long-form narrative arts of previous eras and how serial television works now we risk overlooking how those structural differences shape the meaning of any particular work.

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Copyright © John Plotz, 2014

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