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Twin Peaks and Philosophy

Twin Peaks and Philosophy

Rachel Robison-Greene, Richard Greene

About this book

2017 saw the triumphant return of the weird and haunting TV show Twin Peaks, with most of the original cast, after a gap of twenty-five years. Twin Peaks and Philosophy finally answers that puzzling question: What is Twin Peaks really about? Twin Peaks is about evil in various forms, and poses the question: What's the worst kind of evil? Can the everyday evil of humans in a small mountain town ever be as evil as the evil of alien supernatural beings? Or is the evil of non-humans actually less threatening because it's so strange and unaccountable? And does the influence of uncanny forces somehow excuse the crimes committed by regular folks? Twin Peaks is about the imagination run wild, moving from metaphysics to pataphysics--the discipline invented by Alfred Jarry, which probes the assumption that anything can happen and discovers the laws governing events which constitute exceptions to all laws.

Details

OL Work ID
OL20175051W

Subjects

Lynch, david, 1946-Philosophy in literatureAmerican literature, history and criticismCriticism and interpretationTwin Peaks (Television program)

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HardcoverOpen Library
Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.