The British comedy drama Doc Martin is set in the fictional fishing village of Portwenn in Cornwall, where the community’s only medical practioner, Dr Martin Ellingham, is known to be brilliant as regards the clinical aspects of his profession but totally devoid of even the most basic interpersonal skills. He is habitually gruff, ill-tempered and extremely rude to patients, and indeed to the entire population of Portwenn. This paper draws upon Brown and Levinson’s (1978, 1987) pioneering studies of face-threatening acts and politeness, but also Spencer-Oatey’s more recent work (2007, 2008) on quality face, social identity face and relational face. The concept of creative impoliteness owes much to Culpeper’s view (1996, 2005, 2011) of impoliteness as a phenomenon related to situated behaviours that conflict with interlocutors’ expectations, wishes and notions of what ought to be said or done during interaction. The aim is to demonstrate how Dr Ellingham’s rudeness does not consist of unoriginal insults or standard terms of offence – if it did, viewers would quickly switch off – but involves highly creative use of language and thus serves as the main source of humour in the TV series. In Doc Martin imaginative script writers and a skilled actor create a character who in real life would be insupportable, but on the TV screen is a comic monster.

"Collect a thousand loyalty points and you get a free coffin". Creative impoliteness in the TV comedy drama Doc Martin

Steve Buckledee
2020-01-01

Abstract

The British comedy drama Doc Martin is set in the fictional fishing village of Portwenn in Cornwall, where the community’s only medical practioner, Dr Martin Ellingham, is known to be brilliant as regards the clinical aspects of his profession but totally devoid of even the most basic interpersonal skills. He is habitually gruff, ill-tempered and extremely rude to patients, and indeed to the entire population of Portwenn. This paper draws upon Brown and Levinson’s (1978, 1987) pioneering studies of face-threatening acts and politeness, but also Spencer-Oatey’s more recent work (2007, 2008) on quality face, social identity face and relational face. The concept of creative impoliteness owes much to Culpeper’s view (1996, 2005, 2011) of impoliteness as a phenomenon related to situated behaviours that conflict with interlocutors’ expectations, wishes and notions of what ought to be said or done during interaction. The aim is to demonstrate how Dr Ellingham’s rudeness does not consist of unoriginal insults or standard terms of offence – if it did, viewers would quickly switch off – but involves highly creative use of language and thus serves as the main source of humour in the TV series. In Doc Martin imaginative script writers and a skilled actor create a character who in real life would be insupportable, but on the TV screen is a comic monster.
2020
9789027207463
9789027260826
Creative impoliteness; Quality face; Social identity face; Relational face
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11584/295407
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