Through the Gaps of My Fingers: Genre, Femininity, and Cringe Aesthetics in Dramedy Television

Date

2018-05-30

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

1527-4764

Volume Title

Publisher

Sage

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

Concentrating on the series “Girls” (2012–2017), “Fleabag” (2016), and “Insecure” (2016–), this article examines the female-centered dramedy as a current genre of U.S.-American television culture with specific investments in gendered value hierarchies. The article explores the format’s dominant narrative and aesthetic practices with specific focus on prestige dramedy’s “cringe” aesthetics. Cringe is increasingly mobilized as a mode of political expression following the format’s privileging of female subjectivities. As such, cringe is tasked with negotiating the tensions between drama and comedy on one hand and intersectional relations of identity politics on the other. Character “complexity,” embedded in ideological themes around identity, modifies the “comedy” in cringe and becomes associated with the more prestigious dramatic mode, this way governing the texts’ appeal to cultural value. The article demonstrates the ways the female-centered cringe dramedy expresses its politicization and “complexity” via disturbing gendered expectations of mediated femininity, and specifically body and sexuality politics.

Description

The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link

Keywords

dramedy, quality TV, body politics, gender, race, female-centred television, "Girls", "Fleabag", "Insecure", cringe comedy

Citation

Havas, J. and Sulimma, M. (2018) Through the Gaps of My Fingers: Genre, Femininity, and Cringe Aesthetics in Dramedy Television. Television & New Media,

Rights

Research Institute