For those of you who are Anglophiles, and I suspect that’s a good many of you, who therefore are probably spending your Sunday evenings watching Downton Abbey , a dissenting story from Slate, What is Actually at Stake at Downton Abbey? The answer is apparently, according to June Thomas: little, which she finds weird, since given the setting and period all sorts of interesting things should be happening.
A writer for Salon, she continues,
wrote that this weeks episode revealed how deeply Downton has become not just a soap, but only a soap, which is to say a drama that is interesting only when big-time melodramatic eventslike a wedding or an interrupted weddinghappen.
Thomas goes on to praise the working class English soap operas which “turn everyday events, like infidelity and workplace intrigue, into high-stakes affairs.” Leaving aside the idea that adultery is an everyday affair even if it’s common in her circles, few will experience it as “everyday” she argues that these shows are “stuffed with silly, absurdly low-stakes plot linesan epic feud [in Coronation Street ] between a taxi driver and a school crossing guard stretched out far longer than I ever imagined possiblebut its classic soapy stories about extramarital affairs and meddling ex-lovers consistently carry serious consequences: lost paternity rights, homelessness, unemployment, and even death.”
I pass this on as, not being an Anglophile, a non-watcher.