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Abstract

Melodrama is thus continuous with the more culturally established and revered form of opera. Since the late eighteenth century, the word 'melodramatic' has become a term of abuse. Pygmalion is at once a drama of self-actualisation through which primal drives and sexual differences are acted out, a poetic meditation on the nature of being and the possibility of transcendence, and a philosophical argument about the relationship between aesthetics, romance and the sacred.3 In tracing melodrama as a mode that emerges at the intersection of the theatrical and the philosophical, my reading necessarily risks reprising a dominant historical narrative whereby post-enlightenment ideas and aesthetics coming out of England and parts of Europe, in the late eighteenth-century, in turn influenced developments in popular and intellectual culture in North America and elsewhere. [...]it is this statistical perfection which dooms it to death. [...]of the eventual disintegration of the Loud family unit-the various members went their separate ways after the filming-Baudrillard asks 'What would have happened if TV had not been there' (my emphasis).

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Copyright Association for the Study of Australian Literature (ASAL) May 2013