Abstract
In this chapter, I argue that the development of a sense of European belonging is highly uneven, and is variously impacted upon by different media in different national contexts. In particular, I maintain that in most popular British TV programmes and in certain films set in England, an emergent sense of European belonging is hindered by the dense evocation of a mundane Englishness. These banal representations align with the mundane experience of everyday life, and more specifically, in the cases discussed, with the familiar, unreflexive belonging that is induced through dwelling and acting in banal kinds of quotidian spaces. This pervasive and reiterative mediatization of ordinary national space does not exemplify some kind of strategy to inculcate a sense of national belonging in contradistinction to a wider sense of European identity. However, I contend that it is precisely in these unremarkable depictions that an unreflexive sense of belonging to England is consolidated to constitute a kind of common sense that forms the fertile ground on which discursive nationalist sentiments can prosper.
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Edensor, T. (2015). Sensing National Spaces: Representing the Mundane in English Film and Television. In: Bondebjerg, I., Redvall, E.N., Higson, A. (eds) European Cinema and Television. Palgrave European Film and Media Studies. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137356888_4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137356888_4
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