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The empath and the psychopath: ethics, imagination, and intercorporeality in Bryan Fuller's Hannibal

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-07-11, 09:38 authored by Jane Stadler
The long-form television drama series Hannibal (Fuller 2013–2015) thematises the embodied imagination and the elicitation of empathy and ethical understanding at the level of narrative and characterisation as well as through character engagement and screen aesthetics. Using Hannibal as a case study, this research investigates how stylistic choices frame the experiences of screen characters and engender forms of intersubjectivity based on corporeal and cognitive routes to empathy; in particular, it examines the capacity for screen media to facilitate what neuroscientist Vittorio Gallese terms intercorporeality. As a constitutive aspect of intersubjectivity and social understanding that works through embodied simulation, intercorporeality invites a reconceptualisation of empathy and its association with ethical motivation and insight. Hannibal also introduces cannibalism as a dark metaphor for the incorporation of another into oneself, reflecting on empathy's ill-understood potential for negative affect and unethical consequences.

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ISSN

1466-4615

Journal title

Film-Philosophy

Volume

21

Issue

3

Pagination

17 pp

Publisher

Edinburgh University Press

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2017 Jane Stadler. This article is published as Open Access under the terms of the Creative Commons AttributionNonCommercial Licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits non-commercial use, distribution and reproduction provided the original work is cited.

Language

eng

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