The essay aims at analyzing the different narrative and rhetorical approaches of two prominent British screenwriters to the representation of British aristocracy. The works by Julian Fellowes and by Peter Morgan offer the recent most popular contributions to the representation of British aristocratic life-style and values in contemporary mainstream culture. Besides the global success of their stories, a reason of interest for going deep into the way the two writers tackle the topic resides in their different political and ideological perspectives. On the one side, Fellowes’s depiction of aristocracy in his hit prime time TV drama Downton Abbey (ITV, 2010-2015) draws on the open conservative mindset of the author (“The BBC wouldn’t have done that… They are not happy with dramas that do not reflect their own political and philosophical viewpoint”). On the other side, portraying the Royal Family first in the film The Queen (2006), then in the TV series The Crown (Netflix, 2016), Morgan’s believes – opposite to Fellowes’ ones – were spurred (“it’s absolutely scandalous that they should still exist in an egalitarian society”). The aim of my analysis is twofold. First, to highlight how both Fellowes and Morgan had to control and balance the expression of their ideological credo so that their narrative wouldn’t be felt as “preachy”. Second, to identify which thematic solutions allowed them to make aristocracy (a topic generally felt as remote and distant) engaging for contemporary audiences.

Braga, P., Narrative Rhetoric in Representing the British Aristocracy: Julian Fellowes and Peter Morgan, in Michelucci, S., Duncan, I., Villa, V. L. (ed.), The British Aristocracy in Popular Culture: Essays on 200 Years of Representations, McFarland, Jefferson 2020: 218- 257 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/153387]

Narrative Rhetoric in Representing the British Aristocracy: Julian Fellowes and Peter Morgan

Braga, Paolo
2020

Abstract

The essay aims at analyzing the different narrative and rhetorical approaches of two prominent British screenwriters to the representation of British aristocracy. The works by Julian Fellowes and by Peter Morgan offer the recent most popular contributions to the representation of British aristocratic life-style and values in contemporary mainstream culture. Besides the global success of their stories, a reason of interest for going deep into the way the two writers tackle the topic resides in their different political and ideological perspectives. On the one side, Fellowes’s depiction of aristocracy in his hit prime time TV drama Downton Abbey (ITV, 2010-2015) draws on the open conservative mindset of the author (“The BBC wouldn’t have done that… They are not happy with dramas that do not reflect their own political and philosophical viewpoint”). On the other side, portraying the Royal Family first in the film The Queen (2006), then in the TV series The Crown (Netflix, 2016), Morgan’s believes – opposite to Fellowes’ ones – were spurred (“it’s absolutely scandalous that they should still exist in an egalitarian society”). The aim of my analysis is twofold. First, to highlight how both Fellowes and Morgan had to control and balance the expression of their ideological credo so that their narrative wouldn’t be felt as “preachy”. Second, to identify which thematic solutions allowed them to make aristocracy (a topic generally felt as remote and distant) engaging for contemporary audiences.
2020
Inglese
The British Aristocracy in Popular Culture: Essays on 200 Years of Representations
978-1476674872
McFarland
Braga, P., Narrative Rhetoric in Representing the British Aristocracy: Julian Fellowes and Peter Morgan, in Michelucci, S., Duncan, I., Villa, V. L. (ed.), The British Aristocracy in Popular Culture: Essays on 200 Years of Representations, McFarland, Jefferson 2020: 218- 257 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/153387]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/153387
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