THE FALL OF EVE: THE FRAILTY OF MORAL ALIGNMENT IN KILLING EVE

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Eduarda De Carli
Elaine Barros Indrusiak

Resumo

The figure of the double (FREUD, 1955) is recurrent in investigative stories, as the very core of these works is the opposition between detective and criminal. We can read the criminal as the double of the detective in the classic detective genre; their mirror-image of dubious moral and evil acts (KEKES, 2010). As the genre evolved alongside changes in social order, this good-and-evil duality has become more blurred, culminating in the emergence of the hardboiled detective and the noir novel and their future influences. One of the works influenced by the blurring of the tenuous line between good and evil is Killing Eve (BBC America, 2018-), which presents an investigator and an assassin that have a mutual obsession. The aim of this article is to analyze Villanelle, the assassin, as the double image of Eve, the investigator, and how this mirroring results in a change of morality for Eve that represents her descent into evil actions in the first season. Considering the television series as a serialized medium product, we intend to show how a character development as a double entity throughout the series results in changes of alignment in the diegesis.

Detalhes do artigo

Como Citar
De Carli, E., & Barros Indrusiak, E. (2020). THE FALL OF EVE: THE FRAILTY OF MORAL ALIGNMENT IN KILLING EVE. Abusões, 13(13). https://doi.org/10.12957/abusoes.2020.47647
Seção
O insólito em narrativas de crime, mistério e investigação
Biografia do Autor

Eduarda De Carli, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

Doutoranda em Estudos Literários pela UFRGS

Elaine Barros Indrusiak, UFRGS

Professora da graduação e pós-graduação da Letras da UFRGS.