Abstract
This article interrogates the figure of the Eastern European itinerant in contemporary prestige BBC drama to highlight the figure’s role in mobilizing ideas of nationhood and foreignness in Brexit-era Britain. Our critical analyses of Dracula (BBC1, 2020), Killing Eve (BBC America, 2018–), and Call the Midwife (BBC1, 2012–) show that programming that putatively celebrates British multiculturalism and diversity configures the Eastern European foreigner as a threat to idea(l)s of Britishness, by deploying this figure in strikingly similar imaginaries of contagion, deviance, and savagery. Such treatment embeds these portrayals in discourses of white nationalism that seek to manage national belonging by articulating the limits and rules of the national community as implicitly racialized terms of culture and space.
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Published
Dec 01, 2021
Vol/Issue
10(20)
Pages
48
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View
Cite This Article
Júlia Havas, Anna Mártonfi, Gábor Gergely (2021). Beasts from the East. VIEW Journal of European Television History and Culture, 10(20), 48. https://doi.org/10.18146/view.265