Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Lost in Paradise

View through CrossRef
This article examines the Norwegian and Danish versions of the reality television series Paradise Hotel. The reality show emulates what postmodern consumer society wants us to believe in: a kind of “second transgression” for the human being, in which she is both free and without anxiety. The guests (predominantly male in line with prevailing gender norms) at Paradise Hotel may qualify as shameless—after spells of physical and psychological revelations in front of the camera with no visible regrets—still, the price is perhaps the loss rather than the gain of freedom. The medialized shameless self demands the subordination to narrow bodily and emotional standards during filming, which postpones most of the guests’ shame and regrets until after the cameras are turned off. This particular Fall may have unwanted personal consequences that lead to a spiral ascent crueler than Adam and Eve ever underwent.
Title: Lost in Paradise
Description:
This article examines the Norwegian and Danish versions of the reality television series Paradise Hotel.
The reality show emulates what postmodern consumer society wants us to believe in: a kind of “second transgression” for the human being, in which she is both free and without anxiety.
The guests (predominantly male in line with prevailing gender norms) at Paradise Hotel may qualify as shameless—after spells of physical and psychological revelations in front of the camera with no visible regrets—still, the price is perhaps the loss rather than the gain of freedom.
The medialized shameless self demands the subordination to narrow bodily and emotional standards during filming, which postpones most of the guests’ shame and regrets until after the cameras are turned off.
This particular Fall may have unwanted personal consequences that lead to a spiral ascent crueler than Adam and Eve ever underwent.

Related Results

Earthly Paradise in the Religious Ideas of Old Rus’
Earthly Paradise in the Religious Ideas of Old Rus’
This article examines the Old Russian ideas about the other world and various interpretations of the earthly paradise. The author focuses on the content of Orthodox, apocryphal, an...
Paradises Lost and Found: The Meaning and Function of the “Paradise Within” in “Paradise Lost”
Paradises Lost and Found: The Meaning and Function of the “Paradise Within” in “Paradise Lost”
ABSTRACT Michael, in Book XII of John Milton's Paradise Lost, promises Adam that the woeful consequences of his Fall may be mitigated by the achievement of a “Paradi...
Benjamin Stillingfleet’s Notes on Paradise Lost, Lost and Found
Benjamin Stillingfleet’s Notes on Paradise Lost, Lost and Found
Abstract This essay reveals that the annotated copy of Richard Bentley’s edition of Paradise Lost (1732) with MS notes attributed to Benjamin Stillingfleet (1702–177...
Speech in “Paradise Lost”
Speech in “Paradise Lost”
ABSTRACT In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries several treatises (religious, philosophical, and rhetorical) discussed the Fall of Man as involving a corruption ...
Florence as “Paradise Lost”
Florence as “Paradise Lost”
Abstract The city of Florence has been a place of artistic pilgrimage for centuries. This essay discusses late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century British and American inte...
“To Warn Proud Cities”: a Topical Reference in Milton’s “Airy Knights” Simile (<i>Paradise Lost</i> II.531-8)
“To Warn Proud Cities”: a Topical Reference in Milton’s “Airy Knights” Simile (<i>Paradise Lost</i> II.531-8)
In Paradise Lost II.531-8 modern editors often see an allusion to Josephus’ account of armies appearing in the sky shortly before the fall of Jerusalem. In fact, reports of spectra...
Milton's God: Authority in “Paradise Lost”
Milton's God: Authority in “Paradise Lost”
ABSTRACT Milton's God consistently evokes an unfavorable reaction in the modern reader, the result not so much of our emotional response to Christianity as of our an...
THE MOSAIC VOICE IN "PARADISE LOST"
THE MOSAIC VOICE IN "PARADISE LOST"
ABSTRACT A limited perception of Moses' relation to the epic narrator in Paradise Lost derives from the tendency to regard his brief role as hierophant in an early d...

Back to Top