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Accuracy, Authenticity, Fidelity: Aesthetic Realism, the “Deficit Model,” and the Public Understanding of Science

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2018

Fernando Vidal*
Affiliation:
ICREA (Catalan Institution for Research and Advanced Studies); and CEHIC (Center for the History of Science), Autonomous University of Barcelona E-mail: fernando.vidal@icrea.cat; https://icrea.academia.edu/FVidal

Argument

“Deficit model” designates an outlook on the public understanding and communication of science that emphasizes scientific illiteracy and the need to educate the public. Though criticized, it is still widespread, especially among scientists. Its persistence is due not only to factors ranging from scientists’ training to policy design, but also to the continuance of realism as an aesthetic criterion. This article examines the link between realism and the deficit model through discussions of neurology and psychiatry in fiction film, as well as through debates about historical movies and the cinematic adaptation of literature. It shows that different values and criteria tend to dominate the realist stance in different domains: accuracy for movies concerning neurology and psychiatry, authenticity for the historical film, and fidelity for adaptations of literature. Finally, contrary to the deficit model, it argues that the cinema is better characterized by a surplus of meaning than by informational shortcomings.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2018 

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