Cover, recover et uncover : les motifs de la reprise dans la série Treme

Although Treme, the new project by Simon and Overmyer for HBO, has not yet been integrally broadcasted, a recurring motif appears, which is that of the reprise. There is of course the renovation of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina and the flooding that followed it, but also the reconstruction of...

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Main Author: Peter Marquis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Groupe de Recherche Identités et Cultures 2013-09-01
Series:TV Series
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/tvseries/719
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spelling doaj-84450bf2255e46808ebd27a7ff8cdbab2020-11-24T21:55:25ZengGroupe de Recherche Identités et CulturesTV Series 2266-09092013-09-01310.4000/tvseries.719Cover, recover et uncover : les motifs de la reprise dans la série TremePeter MarquisAlthough Treme, the new project by Simon and Overmyer for HBO, has not yet been integrally broadcasted, a recurring motif appears, which is that of the reprise. There is of course the renovation of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina and the flooding that followed it, but also the reconstruction of local culture, and that of the characters. In one way or another, these elements are all engaged in a process of reconstruction, after the destruction of the intimate, the material, and the immaterial. This article questions the way in which the show works through the motif of the reprise, understood as the altered repetition of something that already exists, just as well in the characters’ lives as in the show’s poetics. In the eleven episodes of season 2, three avatars of reprise appear: musical reprise (cover), metaphorical reprise (recover), and critical reprise (uncover). These three motifs overlap to give the show an idiosyncratic tonality, a mix of slowness, of compassion, and of indignation, a “Treme note” that finds its origin in the generalized recourse to the figure of the reprise. In placing reprise at the heart of its craftsmanship as well as in its diegesis and metadiegesis, Treme constantly questions the complex relations between power, culture, and resilience of the impoverished.http://journals.openedition.org/tvseries/719TremeNew Orleanscover songspolitics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Peter Marquis
spellingShingle Peter Marquis
Cover, recover et uncover : les motifs de la reprise dans la série Treme
TV Series
Treme
New Orleans
cover songs
politics
author_facet Peter Marquis
author_sort Peter Marquis
title Cover, recover et uncover : les motifs de la reprise dans la série Treme
title_short Cover, recover et uncover : les motifs de la reprise dans la série Treme
title_full Cover, recover et uncover : les motifs de la reprise dans la série Treme
title_fullStr Cover, recover et uncover : les motifs de la reprise dans la série Treme
title_full_unstemmed Cover, recover et uncover : les motifs de la reprise dans la série Treme
title_sort cover, recover et uncover : les motifs de la reprise dans la série treme
publisher Groupe de Recherche Identités et Cultures
series TV Series
issn 2266-0909
publishDate 2013-09-01
description Although Treme, the new project by Simon and Overmyer for HBO, has not yet been integrally broadcasted, a recurring motif appears, which is that of the reprise. There is of course the renovation of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina and the flooding that followed it, but also the reconstruction of local culture, and that of the characters. In one way or another, these elements are all engaged in a process of reconstruction, after the destruction of the intimate, the material, and the immaterial. This article questions the way in which the show works through the motif of the reprise, understood as the altered repetition of something that already exists, just as well in the characters’ lives as in the show’s poetics. In the eleven episodes of season 2, three avatars of reprise appear: musical reprise (cover), metaphorical reprise (recover), and critical reprise (uncover). These three motifs overlap to give the show an idiosyncratic tonality, a mix of slowness, of compassion, and of indignation, a “Treme note” that finds its origin in the generalized recourse to the figure of the reprise. In placing reprise at the heart of its craftsmanship as well as in its diegesis and metadiegesis, Treme constantly questions the complex relations between power, culture, and resilience of the impoverished.
topic Treme
New Orleans
cover songs
politics
url http://journals.openedition.org/tvseries/719
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