Basil Fawlty ja "esithatcherilaisuus" sarjassa Pitkän Jussin majatalo
Rami Mähkä
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042715721
Tiivistelmä
The article analyses the popular British situation comedy Fawlty Towers
(BBC, 1975, 1979) as a comedic representation of conservatism and its
lead character, Basil Fawlty (played by John Cleese), as a
‘pre-Thatcherite’. The article discusses how Fawlty and the series can
help us to understand the processes which led to Margaret Thatcher
winning the election in 1979 and becoming prime minister. Fawlty
promotes similar values to Thatcher, but with ambiguity as the series is
a comedy; comedy makes interpretation of ideological issues problematic
as it is an alternative meaning-making system to non-comedic forms.
The
article understands conservatism and Thatcherism as discourses rather
than political dogmas or programmes. Thatcherism, including its
relationship with particular forms of conservatism, is ambivalent and in
some cases contradictory. Basil Fawlty is a prime example of this. The
article argues that Fawlty can be seen as a ‘pre-Thatcherite’. He is the
main target of laughter and ridicule in the series, but because of his
witty remarks and sarcasm we are also laughing with him, not only at
him. Despite his old-fashioned conservatism, he also represents values,
such as patriotism, which can be seen as identifiable across political
and ideological lines. This is exactly what Thatcher accomplished in the
late 1970s.
Kokoelmat
- Rinnakkaistallenteet [19207]