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Modeling narrative features in TV series: coding and clustering analysis

The Arts

Modeling narrative features in TV series: coding and clustering analysis

M. Rocchi and G. Pescatore

This research by Marta Rocchi and Guglielmo Pescatore delves into the narrative structure of US medical TV series, analyzing over 400 hours of video to uncover key narrative features. Discover how their data-driven approach reveals the genre's surprising stability and the subtle art of storytelling in medicine.... show more
Abstract
TV series have gained both economic and cultural relevance. Their development over time can hardly be traced back to the simple programmatic action of creative intentionality. Instead, TV series might be studied as narrative ecosystems with emergent trends and patterns. This paper aims to boost quantitative research in the field of media studies, first considering a comparative and data-driven study of the narrative features in the US medical TV series, one of the most popular and longest-running genres on global television. Based on a corpus of more than 400 h of video, we investigate the storytelling evolution of eight audiovisual serial products by identifying three main narrative features (i.e., isotopies). The implemented schematization allows to grasp the basic components of the social interactions showing the strength of the medical genre and its ability to rebuild, in its microcosm, the essential traits of the human macrocosm where random everyday life elements (seen in the medical cases plot) mix and overlap with working and social relationships (professional plot) and personal relationships (sentimental plot). This study relies on data-driven research that combines content analysis and clustering analysis. It significantly differs from traditional studies regarding the narrative features of medical dramas and broadly the field of television studies. We proved that the three isotopies are good descriptors for the medical drama genre and identified four narrative profiles which emphasize the strong stability of these serial products. Contrary to what is often taken for granted in many interpretative studies, creative decisions rarely significantly change the general narrative aspects of the wider series.
Publisher
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Sep 23, 2022
Authors
Marta Rocchi, Guglielmo Pescatore
Tags
medical TV series
narrative features
data-driven approach
content analysis
narrative profiles
genres stability
creative decisions
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