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Abject jurisdictions : CSI: Miami, globalisation and the body politic

journal contribution
posted on 2008-01-01, 00:00 authored by Patrick WestPatrick West
This article argues that CSI: Miami disseminates two versions of politics, one of which replicates the conservative suppression of political debate in America post 9/11, and the other being founded in an understanding of the body as transgressive site of political activism. This second version of politics emerges out of Julia Kristeva's theory of abjection as a confusion of borders, which unsettles equally the discreteness of identity and the sense of order that subtends conservative politics. CSI: Miami can be multiply interrogated employing Kristeva's theory because the city it portrays, as well as the bodies inhabiting it, are both natured by an abject problematisation of borders. This paper explores the specifics of the portrayal of bodies in CSI: Miami, to suggest that abjection operates at the level both of discrete bodies and of the social domain of globalisation. In CSI: Miami, the political body becomes the body politic.

History

Journal

Critical studies in television : scholarly studies in small screen fictions

Volume

3

Issue

1

Season

Spring

Pagination

60 - 75

Publisher

Manchester University Press

Location

Manchester, England

ISSN

1749-6020

eISSN

1749-6039

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

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