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12 - ‘What do you think makes a bad dad?’ Shane Meadows and Fatherhood

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 October 2013

Martin Fradley
Affiliation:
University of Aberdeen
Seán Kingston
Affiliation:
University College Dublin
Martin Fradley
Affiliation:
Freelance film scholar
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Summary

The term ‘father’ can signify many things.

Stella Bruzzi (2006: vii)

Like its predecessors in Meadows' hugely popular film and television cycle, This is England '88 (2011) begins with a poignantly hauntological montage of archival news footage from the 1980s. Evocatively fuzzy, the sweepingly impressionistic series of analogue video images reaffirms Meadows' insistence on understanding the 1980s as a kind of national primal scene: a traumatic era in which social and political upheaval becomes irrevocably entangled with popular and personal memory. This expressionist strategy is exemplified by what are perhaps the most disturbing moments in Meadows' career to date. The protracted sequence featuring Lol's hospitalisation following a suicide attempt powerfully conflates personal biography, subjective trauma and prosthetic memory. Overlaid with an undulating sound mix of prayer, Catholic incantation and the voice of her dead father, Meadows splices together a highly condensed affective bricolage: religious iconography is interspersed with joyless sexual coupling; Lol's aborted marriage to Woody appears next to horrific footage of children cowering behind gravestones during the Loyalist massacre at Milltown Cemetery; grotesque close-ups of a leering Combo sit uneasily alongside blurry shots of emaciated African children. The emergency purging of Lol's stomach is conflated with the violently incoherent regurgitation of her fractured selfhood, the sacred and profane overlapping in an emotionally affective and necessarily over-determined melange of love, rape, guilt, spirituality, post-colonial fallout, murder, procreation and humanitarian catastrophe.

Type
Chapter
Information
Shane Meadows
Critical Essays
, pp. 171 - 185
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2013

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