Abstract
The first season of HBO's cult hit True Detective introduced viewers to a southern gothic murder mystery that many will not easily forget. Since many of us focused primarily on the whodunit narrative, we may have missed the narrative of trauma simmering under the surface of the story. This narrative of trauma reveals a deeper layer to the story between Detective Rust Cohle and serial killer Errol Childress, one that also reveals our own fears regarding trauma in our lives. By applying first the nihilist philosophies of Peter Zapffe with Cohle and Catherine Malabou's concept on destructive plasticity in Childress, we can understand on a deeper level the motivations behind Childress's murderous actions and Cohle's frequent existential musings that are scattered throughout every episode. By understanding these characters as trauma survivors and representations of what happens psychologically after a traumatic event, we can further learn how our inability to talk about trauma and have true empathy for survivors can ultimately harm a survivors’ ability to navigate their new post-trauma space and, perhaps, lead that survivor to become like Childress--a fate that could just as easily happen to us.
Recommended Citation
Patrick-Weber, Courtney
(2016)
"Destructive Plasticity, “Surplus of Consciousness,” and the “Monster” in True Detective,"
Dialogue: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Popular Culture and Pedagogy: Vol. 3:
Iss.
2, Article 9.
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/dialogue/vol3/iss2/9
Included in
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