Description

Book Synopsis

This is the first book to explore the hold of TV series on our lives from a philosophical and ethical perspective. Sandra Laugier argues that this vital and ubiquitous expression of popular culture throughout the world is transformative in its effects on the activity of philosophy in everyday life. Drawing on Stanley Cavell’s work on film and ordinary experience, Laugier contends that we are deeply affected by the formative role played by the TV series we watch, and by the ways they become interconnected with our daily lives.

The philosophical thinking embodied in series empowers individuals in their capacity to experience, understand and appropriate elements of the world, and to educate themselves. Through our relationships with TV series, we develop our own tastes and competences, which are constitutive of our distinct experience of life. ‘Series-philosophy’ is thus a democratizing force. It also offers us a new ethics, for morality can be found not in general rules and abstract principles but in the narrative texture of characters in everyday situations facing particular ethical problems, and with whom we form attachments that result in our moral education—in sometimes surprising ways.



Table of Contents

Introduction
1. An Education
2. Forms of Shared Experience
3. Family Resemblances
4. Caring For, By, and With TV Series
Conclusion
Bibliography
Serigraphy and Filmography
Index

TV-Philosophy: How TV Series Change Our Thinking

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    A Hardback by Sandra Laugier, Daniela Ginsburg

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      View other formats and editions of TV-Philosophy: How TV Series Change Our Thinking by Sandra Laugier

      Publisher: University of Exeter Press
      Publication Date: 27/06/2023
      ISBN13: 9781804130216, 978-1804130216
      ISBN10: 1804130214

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This is the first book to explore the hold of TV series on our lives from a philosophical and ethical perspective. Sandra Laugier argues that this vital and ubiquitous expression of popular culture throughout the world is transformative in its effects on the activity of philosophy in everyday life. Drawing on Stanley Cavell’s work on film and ordinary experience, Laugier contends that we are deeply affected by the formative role played by the TV series we watch, and by the ways they become interconnected with our daily lives.

      The philosophical thinking embodied in series empowers individuals in their capacity to experience, understand and appropriate elements of the world, and to educate themselves. Through our relationships with TV series, we develop our own tastes and competences, which are constitutive of our distinct experience of life. ‘Series-philosophy’ is thus a democratizing force. It also offers us a new ethics, for morality can be found not in general rules and abstract principles but in the narrative texture of characters in everyday situations facing particular ethical problems, and with whom we form attachments that result in our moral education—in sometimes surprising ways.



      Table of Contents

      Introduction
      1. An Education
      2. Forms of Shared Experience
      3. Family Resemblances
      4. Caring For, By, and With TV Series
      Conclusion
      Bibliography
      Serigraphy and Filmography
      Index

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