Chernobyl, Chornobyl and Anthropocentric Narrative

Authors

  • Brett Mills Edge Hill University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.6092/issn.2421-454X/12419

Keywords:

Chernobyl, Animal Studies, Television Drama, Anthropocentrism, Species

Abstract

This article examines the representation of animals in the drama series Chernobyl (2019). In doing so it evidences anthropocentric narrative; that is, story-telling in which the prioritisation of the human and human-centred matters are normalised. Drawing on specific examples from the programme, it shows how animals are used as representational resources enabling the series’ human-centred narrative to be told, in particular focusing on the depiction of the death of animals, and the use of animals as metaphor. The article draws on approaches arising from the ‘animal turn’, which aims to decentre human-ness as the only form of experience and to critique speciesist hierarchies. Chernobyl is a useful case study for such an analysis precisely because the historical event it depicts is one that had, and continues to have, significant consequences for non-human beings.

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TV series and other media cited

Chernobyl (2019)

The Chernobyl Podcast (2019)

Electrocuting an Elephant (1903)

Star Trek (1966-1969)

The Walking Dead (2010-)

The Wire (2002-2008)

Downloads

Published

2021-07-29

How to Cite

Mills, B. (2021). Chernobyl, Chornobyl and Anthropocentric Narrative. Series - International Journal of TV Serial Narratives, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.6092/issn.2421-454X/12419

Issue

Section

Narratives / Aesthetics / Criticism