‘Everything is awesome’: The LEGO movie and the affective politics of security

Scholarship on the finance-security nexus has typically been concerned with ‘first order’ phenomena, such as the interpenetration of the finance and security sectors. This article contributes to the debate by turning to an apparent epiphenomenon, namely The LEGO Movie, and using it to address some o...

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Main Author: Joyce Goggin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh 2017-12-01
Series:Finance and Society
Online Access:http://financeandsociety.ed.ac.uk/article/view/2574
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spelling doaj-6da981ad18d34e83874354031f240ee22020-11-25T02:32:03ZengUniversity of EdinburghFinance and Society2059-59992017-12-01321435810.2218/finsoc.v3i2.25742574‘Everything is awesome’: The LEGO movie and the affective politics of securityJoyce Goggin0University of AmsterdamScholarship on the finance-security nexus has typically been concerned with ‘first order’ phenomena, such as the interpenetration of the finance and security sectors. This article contributes to the debate by turning to an apparent epiphenomenon, namely The LEGO Movie, and using it to address some overlooked intersections between popular culture and the finance-security complex. The analysis first focuses on how finance and security are represented in the film, through the plot and the fictional company at the centre of the film’s conflict, to its LEGO minifigure characters and the playsets featured therein. The focus then shifts to how the LEGO Group’s business model informs the film in significant ways, from the plot’s motivation and structure, and the mise-en-scène, to how the film was produced. My argument throughout is that a seemingly innocent or insignificant film in fact participates in the financialization and securitization of daily life through its very style and status as a cultural product. Key here is how The LEGO Movie does this in ways that confound possible critique through the use of irony and cute aesthetics, as well as through its own supposed triviality.http://financeandsociety.ed.ac.uk/article/view/2574
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joyce Goggin
spellingShingle Joyce Goggin
‘Everything is awesome’: The LEGO movie and the affective politics of security
Finance and Society
author_facet Joyce Goggin
author_sort Joyce Goggin
title ‘Everything is awesome’: The LEGO movie and the affective politics of security
title_short ‘Everything is awesome’: The LEGO movie and the affective politics of security
title_full ‘Everything is awesome’: The LEGO movie and the affective politics of security
title_fullStr ‘Everything is awesome’: The LEGO movie and the affective politics of security
title_full_unstemmed ‘Everything is awesome’: The LEGO movie and the affective politics of security
title_sort ‘everything is awesome’: the lego movie and the affective politics of security
publisher University of Edinburgh
series Finance and Society
issn 2059-5999
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Scholarship on the finance-security nexus has typically been concerned with ‘first order’ phenomena, such as the interpenetration of the finance and security sectors. This article contributes to the debate by turning to an apparent epiphenomenon, namely The LEGO Movie, and using it to address some overlooked intersections between popular culture and the finance-security complex. The analysis first focuses on how finance and security are represented in the film, through the plot and the fictional company at the centre of the film’s conflict, to its LEGO minifigure characters and the playsets featured therein. The focus then shifts to how the LEGO Group’s business model informs the film in significant ways, from the plot’s motivation and structure, and the mise-en-scène, to how the film was produced. My argument throughout is that a seemingly innocent or insignificant film in fact participates in the financialization and securitization of daily life through its very style and status as a cultural product. Key here is how The LEGO Movie does this in ways that confound possible critique through the use of irony and cute aesthetics, as well as through its own supposed triviality.
url http://financeandsociety.ed.ac.uk/article/view/2574
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