Introduction
Section 1: Human Identity
Chapter 1: Race, Cyborgs, and the Pitfalls of Biopolitical
Discourse in Black Mirror’s “Men Against Fire”
Diana Leon-Boys and Morten Stinus Kristensen
Chapter 2: Digitally Natural: Gender and Sexuality Norms in Black
Mirror
Angela M. Cirucci
Chapter 3: A Virtual Ever-After: Utopia, Race, and Gender in Black
Mirror’s “San Junipero”
Eleanor Drage
Section 2: Surveillance Culture
Chapter 4: Black Mirror’s “Nosedive” as a new Panopticon:
Interveillance and Digital Parrhesia in Alternative Realities
Francois Allard-Huver and Julie Escurignan
Chapter 5: All Eyes on Me: Surveillance and the Digital Archive in
“The Entire History of You”
Derek R. Blackwell
Chapter 6: Seeing the “Surveillant Face” of Technology in Black
Mirror: Using Futuristic Scenarios for an Interdisciplinary
Discussion on the Feasibility and Implications of Technology
Pinelopi Troullinou and Mathieu d’Aquin
Section 3: The Spectacle and Hyperreality
Chapter 7: Waldo Wins IRL: Donald Trump, Black Mirror, and the
Politics of Jean Baudrillard’s Hyperreal
Michael Mario Albrecht
Chapter 8: Why Black Mirror is Really Written by Jean Baudrillard:
A Philosophical Interpretation of Charlie Brooker’s Series
Manel Jiménez-Morales and Marta Lopera-Mármol
Chapter 9: Spectacular Tech-Nightmare: Broadcasting Guy Debord
Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni Berns
Section 4: Aesthetics
Chapter 10: Rhetorical Ethics in Black Mirror: The Aesthetics of
Existence in Hyperreality and Posthumanity
Hillary A. Jones
Chapter 11: The Hysterical Sublime: Black Mirror, “Playtest,” and
the Crises of the Present
Matthew Flisfeder
Chapter 12: Black Mirror, White Spaces: Nihilism, Enlightenment,
and Technology
Barry Vacker and Erin Espelie
Section 5: Technology and Existence
Chapter 13: Over-Extended Media: Hashtag Hatred and Domestic
Drones
Julia M. Hildebrand
Chapter 14: Unbearable Burden: Discipline, Punishment, and Moral
Dystopia in Black Mirror’s “White Bear”
Osei Alleyne
Chapter 15: The Entire Evolution of Media: A Media Ecological
Approach to Black Mirror
Carlos A. Scolari
Section 6: Dystopian Futures
Chapter 16: Heterotopias and Utopias in Black Mirror: Michel
Foucault on “San Junipero”
Sarah J. Constant
Chapter 17: Trapped in Dystopian Techno Realities: Nosediving into
Simulation through Consumptive Viewing
Erika M. Thomas and Romin Rajan
Chapter 18: The Dystopia of the Spectator: Past Revival and
Acceleration of Time in Black Mirror (“The Entire History of You”
and “Be Right Back”)
Macarena Urzúa Opazo and Antoine Faure
Conclusion: Connecting Our Themes to Season Four and the Future
Index
About the Editors
About the Contributors
Angela M. Cirucci is assistant professor of media studies at
Kutztown University.
Barry Vacker is associate professor in the Klein College of Media
and Communication at Temple University.
Black Mirror is a television program made to think with and, even
to the casual viewer, it feels as though the stories plumb unseen
depths at the intersection of human nature and the cutting edge of
technology. Coming to grips with the deep currents of the show is
difficult for the solo viewer, but Black Mirror and Critical Media
Theory provides a set of maps for exploring this media text.
Reading the collection is a bit like watching the show with a group
of fans who share an interest in the structure of human culture.
And like the show itself, each chapter stands well on its own but
together they support a strong collection of thematic analyses that
pull on the threads of ideas that run through each of the seasons
of Black Mirror. Whether read by an interested fan or in the
context of a course, there is something for every reader within
this collection.
*Alexander Halavais, Arizona State University*
Nowhere in contemporary popular culture is the near future more
scary or visceral or than Charlie Brooker's dystopian series Black
Mirror, and nowhere has that vision been more widely scrutinised
than the wide-ranging and razor-sharp chapters in Cirucci and
Vacker's collection. From the excesses of social media consumption
to the panopticon of pervasive surveillance, Black Mirror and
Critical Media Theory combines offers a range of theoretical lenses
to understand and frame the immanent and pressing questions that
Black Mirror so disturbingly raises.
*Tama Leaver, Curtin University*
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