The Black Museum of “Black Mirror”: image, conservation and crisis of memory

The last instalment (the sixth of the fourth season) of Black Mirror, the lucky TV series by Netflix broadcasted since 2011, is probably the node to which the multiple themes of the present anthology converge. Indeed, the noir in its broader sense shrouds every episode in a dark vision; a dystopic,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Francesco Paolo Campione
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bologna 2019-12-01
Series:piano b
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pianob.unibo.it/article/view/10250
id doaj-7dada441f0464a78ba36fd6db88fc720
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7dada441f0464a78ba36fd6db88fc7202020-11-25T02:59:12ZengUniversity of Bolognapiano b2531-98762019-12-0141648210.6092/issn.2531-9876/102508709The Black Museum of “Black Mirror”: image, conservation and crisis of memoryFrancesco Paolo Campione0Università degli Studi di MessinaThe last instalment (the sixth of the fourth season) of Black Mirror, the lucky TV series by Netflix broadcasted since 2011, is probably the node to which the multiple themes of the present anthology converge. Indeed, the noir in its broader sense shrouds every episode in a dark vision; a dystopic, yes, but not improbable hyper technological future. It is maybe not a coincidence that the single stories, each independent yet ideally bound to the others, finally lie in a strange museum, located in the most remote corner of the desert and close to a solitary – and apparently abandoned – petrol station. If we read between the lines (or look beyond the panes of this exhibition), it is interesting to observe that the series present a projection which involves not only the relationship between man and technology (in a time where even emotions will be controlled via smartphone apps), but also – in this case – the future of the very ‘museum’ idea, as well as the conservation logics. The moral of the story appears to be that technologies themselves are not good or bad: rather, it is the way they are used that determines their corruption and, consequently, their destructive effects on society. In the case of Black Museum, this degeneration has a name: Rolo Haynes, director of the permanent exhibition. Partly host, partly director and partly unscrupulous speculator, Haynes moved from his past life failures to managing a sort of memorial of horrors: a museum which, similarly to the Black Museums of the most famous world police forces, gathers material evidences of bloodcurdling crimes.https://pianob.unibo.it/article/view/10250museoipertecnologiacriminememoria
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Francesco Paolo Campione
spellingShingle Francesco Paolo Campione
The Black Museum of “Black Mirror”: image, conservation and crisis of memory
piano b
museo
ipertecnologia
crimine
memoria
author_facet Francesco Paolo Campione
author_sort Francesco Paolo Campione
title The Black Museum of “Black Mirror”: image, conservation and crisis of memory
title_short The Black Museum of “Black Mirror”: image, conservation and crisis of memory
title_full The Black Museum of “Black Mirror”: image, conservation and crisis of memory
title_fullStr The Black Museum of “Black Mirror”: image, conservation and crisis of memory
title_full_unstemmed The Black Museum of “Black Mirror”: image, conservation and crisis of memory
title_sort black museum of “black mirror”: image, conservation and crisis of memory
publisher University of Bologna
series piano b
issn 2531-9876
publishDate 2019-12-01
description The last instalment (the sixth of the fourth season) of Black Mirror, the lucky TV series by Netflix broadcasted since 2011, is probably the node to which the multiple themes of the present anthology converge. Indeed, the noir in its broader sense shrouds every episode in a dark vision; a dystopic, yes, but not improbable hyper technological future. It is maybe not a coincidence that the single stories, each independent yet ideally bound to the others, finally lie in a strange museum, located in the most remote corner of the desert and close to a solitary – and apparently abandoned – petrol station. If we read between the lines (or look beyond the panes of this exhibition), it is interesting to observe that the series present a projection which involves not only the relationship between man and technology (in a time where even emotions will be controlled via smartphone apps), but also – in this case – the future of the very ‘museum’ idea, as well as the conservation logics. The moral of the story appears to be that technologies themselves are not good or bad: rather, it is the way they are used that determines their corruption and, consequently, their destructive effects on society. In the case of Black Museum, this degeneration has a name: Rolo Haynes, director of the permanent exhibition. Partly host, partly director and partly unscrupulous speculator, Haynes moved from his past life failures to managing a sort of memorial of horrors: a museum which, similarly to the Black Museums of the most famous world police forces, gathers material evidences of bloodcurdling crimes.
topic museo
ipertecnologia
crimine
memoria
url https://pianob.unibo.it/article/view/10250
work_keys_str_mv AT francescopaolocampione theblackmuseumofblackmirrorimageconservationandcrisisofmemory
AT francescopaolocampione blackmuseumofblackmirrorimageconservationandcrisisofmemory
_version_ 1724703691050582016