_The Americans_, a dark, tense, action thriller with comic touches,
has been hailed by many critics as currently the best show on
television. The story, created by a former CIA spy, centers on two
Soviet agents posing as an ordinary American couple, Philip and
Elizabeth Jennings, in 1980s Washington DC. They have two teenage
children who know nothing of their clandestine occupation and function
as part of their cover story. _The Americans and Philosophy_ brings
together diverse philosophers who take a close look at the
metaphysical and ethical aspects of the _The Americans_. The
Jenningses believe they are living in a decadent capitalist society
and draw emotional uplift from their dedication to a higher ideal.
Just one step ahead of the FBI, they practice murder and seduction as
instruments to further the goals of Communist subversion. This gives
their lives more meaning and more excitement than those of the other
people around them, and serious questions arise as to whether their
lives can be truly fulfilling and ennobled. Quaint-looking 1980s
culture plays a conspicuous role in _The Americans_, an example being
the psychotherapeutic self-awareness cult known as _est_, which
features in the story and also serves as an allegory of espionage, as
_est_ (along with ancient philosophy) asks the question, Do our
secret, inner lives truly align with how we act? The gadgetry of
espionage, including the poorly adapted but actually historically
accurate “mail robot” of the 1980s FBI, prompt speculations about
the interaction of humans with artificial intelligence. Philip and
Elizabeth’s genuine horror when they find that one of their children
is praying and attending church brings out the ambiguities in the
popular notion of brainwashing and indoctrination. Since the
Jenningses’ children enjoy a comfortable life with many
opportunities, can it be true that they are immorally exploited?
Knowing that all weapons of war are intended to kill and maim, can we
uniquely stigmatize some weapons (such as the biological weapon called
“Glanders” in Season Four) as unacceptable? All governments
practice the duplicity and deception of espionage, but special
problems arise when continual lying invades personal relationships. Is
it true that in the modern world, devotion to the state has become a
“sacred fiction,” like a religion? Lying is everywhere in _The
Americans_, but much of the lying is very similar to everyday
deception: parents often withhold from their children facts about the
parents’ jobs which might cause needless anxiety, and tell their
children apparently harmless fibs like saying that Santa Claus exists.
The boundary between criminal lying and everyday lying is a continual
irony in the script of _The Americans_. Can the demands of a lofty
cause, even the survival of freedom or justice in the world, justify
the deliberate killing of an innocent individual? Such questions
continually bombard the show’s protagonists, while existentialist
philosophy poses the question: Is Elizabeth truly free to quit being a
spy?
Les mer
Reds in the Bed
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780812699739
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Open Court
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter