Courtney Hopf
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Spies with ties
The marital logic of the Cold War in The Americans
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This chapter considers the television series The Americans (2013–18) through its overlapping contexts as spy narrative and domestic drama, aligning the former with the epic and the latter with the everyday. The classic super-spy figure, as represented in the genre since its 1960s’ heyday, possessed an autonomy and individualism that was central to his ability to enact the wishes of the state. However, in the early years of the twenty-first century, that figure underwent an evolution through television dramas such as 24, Alias and Homeland, which used domestic settings to complicate the spy persona through a network of personal and familial obligations. This chapter argues that The Americans represents a further evolution of this trend. Rather than the familiar arrangement whereby the domestic drama acts as a microcosm of broader geopolitical events, The Americans constructs its metaphors to project in both directions: the Jennings’ marriage functions as a metaphor for the Cold War, but the Cold War also functions as a metaphor for their marriage – and by extension the institution of marriage itself. This particular interweaving of the epic and the everyday underscores how epic narratives and global events are driven by flawed, conflicted characters, ultimately highlighting how the choices of those characters are both influenced by and reverberate into the everyday lives usually ignored by the epic form.

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Epic / everyday

Moments in television

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