Mental Illness and Narrative Complexity

An Experiential Approach to Puzzle Films and Complex Television

Melanie Kreitler author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Edinburgh University Press

Publishing:31st Dec '25

£95.00

This title is due to be published on 31st December, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Mental Illness and Narrative Complexity cover

Mainstream media’s relationship with mental illness is fraught. Deemed to misrepresent and sensationalise non-normative mental states, productions are said to solidify harmful attitudes in their audiences. Over the past two decades, puzzle films and complex TV shows have broken with time-honoured tropes of mental illness, offering alternative ways of visualising and narrating non-normative mental states. Bringing together cognitive media studies, narrative theory and cultural studies, Melanie Kreitler explores the synergy between complex narrative structures and representations of mental illness. Focusing on US American films and TV shows since the mid-1990s, the book shows how complex productions strategically use their narrative structures to evoke in viewers an experience similar to that of the neuro-non-normative protagonist. Moving beyond the formal characteristics and cognitive effects of narrative complexity, this book argues for the cultural impact that puzzle films and complex television can have on our understanding of mental illness on and off screens.

Melanie Kreitler's book stages an important intervention in debates on narrative complexity. It shows convincingly how complex form is not only a source of attractive puzzlement but a tool of serious cognitive and even phenomenological exploration of mental illness. Developing this argument through a series of case studies drawn from contemporary film and TV, Kreitler overturns assumptions about cognitive approaches to media by demonstrating how cognitive and social meaning-making can work in tandem. * Marco Caracciolo, Associate Professor of English, Ghent University *

ISBN: 9781399542012

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

264 pages