Medical television dramas have become a prominent genre, blending personal and professional narratives within healthcare settings. These series explore the lives of healthcare professionals, ethical dilemmas, and complex doctor-patient relationships while incorporating critical social issues such as abortion as pedagogical tools that shape public perceptions of healthcare and social debates. This article examines how medical dramas like New Amsterdam integrate sensitive topics into their storytelling, contributing to narrative ecosystems theory. Through this framework, the analysis explores mechanisms such as character embedding, narrative alignment, and long-term memory, demonstrating how social issues are woven into narratives and influence discourse. By analyzing the New Amsterdam episode "Maybe Tomorrow," the article illustrates how narrative ecosystems function in serialized television and mirror societal debates on sensitive topics. The findings offer theoretical insights into narrative ecosystem dynamics, highlighting the reciprocal relationship between media narratives and social discourse, emphasizing medical dramas' role in reflecting and influencing ongoing sociopolitical conversations.
Pescatore, G., Sonego, A. (2025). Medical Dramas as Narrative Ecosystems Abortion Representation and Thematic Incorporation in New Amsterdam. PROJECTIONS, 19(2), 63-82 [10.3167/proj.2025.190205].
Medical Dramas as Narrative Ecosystems Abortion Representation and Thematic Incorporation in New Amsterdam
Pescatore G.;Sonego A.
2025
Abstract
Medical television dramas have become a prominent genre, blending personal and professional narratives within healthcare settings. These series explore the lives of healthcare professionals, ethical dilemmas, and complex doctor-patient relationships while incorporating critical social issues such as abortion as pedagogical tools that shape public perceptions of healthcare and social debates. This article examines how medical dramas like New Amsterdam integrate sensitive topics into their storytelling, contributing to narrative ecosystems theory. Through this framework, the analysis explores mechanisms such as character embedding, narrative alignment, and long-term memory, demonstrating how social issues are woven into narratives and influence discourse. By analyzing the New Amsterdam episode "Maybe Tomorrow," the article illustrates how narrative ecosystems function in serialized television and mirror societal debates on sensitive topics. The findings offer theoretical insights into narrative ecosystem dynamics, highlighting the reciprocal relationship between media narratives and social discourse, emphasizing medical dramas' role in reflecting and influencing ongoing sociopolitical conversations.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


