Failing to Move Forward: Journalism, Media, and Affect in David Fincher's

Zodiac (David Fincher, 2007) offers a critique of the mass media’s efforts to restore American valiance with heroic narratives of ordinary people in the aftermath of 9/11. Amending prior scholarly readings of Zodiac as a serial killer narrative, I reconfigure my analysis by taking Fincher at his wor...

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Main Author: Orlando, Nicholas
Format: Others
Published: Scholar Commons 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/7208
http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8405&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-84052018-08-24T05:52:38Z Failing to Move Forward: Journalism, Media, and Affect in David Fincher's Orlando, Nicholas Zodiac (David Fincher, 2007) offers a critique of the mass media’s efforts to restore American valiance with heroic narratives of ordinary people in the aftermath of 9/11. Amending prior scholarly readings of Zodiac as a serial killer narrative, I reconfigure my analysis by taking Fincher at his word and treating it as a journalism film. Borrowing a term from political theorist Elisabeth Anker, I argue that, unlike other contemporary journalism films, Zodiac is constructed as a “melodrama of failure” that, rather than seeking mastery, unveils the instability of evidence and the obsessive uncertainty of procedure. With his film sitting between both the failures of journalism surrounding 9/11 and the 2008 financial crisis, Fincher harkens back to the 1970s to unmask the malignancy of failures past. Manifesting low-level anxiety and doubt within the public, I contend that Fincher presents media as at once looming and intrusive, present and absent, and detached yet affective, privileging fragmentation over unity to put us in touch with temporal potentialities, to what Homay King attributes to the virtual. Fincher’s return to an era of malaise and an apparent obsession with indexicality underscores our unstable epistemological and phenomenological relationships to old and new media. 2018-03-19T07:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/7208 http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8405&context=etd Graduate Theses and Dissertations Scholar Commons Failure Indexicality Mastery Mediation Procedure Virtual American Studies Film and Media Studies
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Failure
Indexicality
Mastery
Mediation
Procedure
Virtual
American Studies
Film and Media Studies
spellingShingle Failure
Indexicality
Mastery
Mediation
Procedure
Virtual
American Studies
Film and Media Studies
Orlando, Nicholas
Failing to Move Forward: Journalism, Media, and Affect in David Fincher's
description Zodiac (David Fincher, 2007) offers a critique of the mass media’s efforts to restore American valiance with heroic narratives of ordinary people in the aftermath of 9/11. Amending prior scholarly readings of Zodiac as a serial killer narrative, I reconfigure my analysis by taking Fincher at his word and treating it as a journalism film. Borrowing a term from political theorist Elisabeth Anker, I argue that, unlike other contemporary journalism films, Zodiac is constructed as a “melodrama of failure” that, rather than seeking mastery, unveils the instability of evidence and the obsessive uncertainty of procedure. With his film sitting between both the failures of journalism surrounding 9/11 and the 2008 financial crisis, Fincher harkens back to the 1970s to unmask the malignancy of failures past. Manifesting low-level anxiety and doubt within the public, I contend that Fincher presents media as at once looming and intrusive, present and absent, and detached yet affective, privileging fragmentation over unity to put us in touch with temporal potentialities, to what Homay King attributes to the virtual. Fincher’s return to an era of malaise and an apparent obsession with indexicality underscores our unstable epistemological and phenomenological relationships to old and new media.
author Orlando, Nicholas
author_facet Orlando, Nicholas
author_sort Orlando, Nicholas
title Failing to Move Forward: Journalism, Media, and Affect in David Fincher's
title_short Failing to Move Forward: Journalism, Media, and Affect in David Fincher's
title_full Failing to Move Forward: Journalism, Media, and Affect in David Fincher's
title_fullStr Failing to Move Forward: Journalism, Media, and Affect in David Fincher's
title_full_unstemmed Failing to Move Forward: Journalism, Media, and Affect in David Fincher's
title_sort failing to move forward: journalism, media, and affect in david fincher's
publisher Scholar Commons
publishDate 2018
url http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/7208
http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8405&context=etd
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