2 hr 25 min

Squid Game (Dong-hyuk 2021) – Season 1 Collective Nightmares

    • Film Reviews

Squid Game – Season 1 (Dong-hyuk 2021)

Join us for the full discussion.

Our first foray into television. This was recorded when Squid Game was at peak popularity. The show is brilliant in execution and rife with sociological content. The series especially excels at drawing connections the show makes between structural circumstances and individual agency, which is the foundation of the sociological imagination. These connections are sometimes taught as the relationships between a buffet (structure) and what people choose to put on their plate (agency). People can only really make choices from the options that are presented to them. In an individualistic culture like the U.S. we focus intently on what people have on their plate, while often completely ignoring the options that were presented in the buffet. Squid Game consistently and clearly makes these connections clear and we are here for it!

This is a long episode and we still definitely didn’t cover all the sociology in it, but we did what we could.

There is lots more of our podcast! Please listen, review, subscribe, and tell your friends.



SPOILERS IN THIS EPISODE

Squid Game (Dong-hyuk 2021)

TOPIC INDEX – Squid Game  (Dong-hyuk 2021) (times are approximate) 

0:30 – Introductions

6:00 – Discussion begins

6:00 – thoughts on the ending

10:30 – laying out our topics

16:00 – structure and agency

18:00 – linking game to society

30:00 – Zimbardo’s prison experiment

32:00 – Mills’ sociological imagination

34:30 – anomie

35:00 – is the Squid Game better?

38:00 – sociological imagination

40:00 – structure vs agency

46:00 – heroes and villains

49:00 – social contract

56:00 – dyads and tryads

57:00 – the ending plot recap

1:13:30 – marble game

1:19:30 – is it horror?

1:23:00 – white collar crime

1:26:00 – structural vs individual violence

1:31:00 – ethnicity and nationality

1:32:00 – Korea, communism, capitalism

1:46:30 – sexuality

14:20 – SPOILERS begin

1:02:00 – filmmaking and plot movement

1:23:10 – grading the series using the Collective Nightmares Evolving Rubric of Social Responsibility

Related Episodes

Wiener Dog (Solondz 2016)

Dark Waters (Haynes 2019)

Credits

Edited and processed with Audacity. Free, cross-platform, open source, and awesome.

https://www.audacityteam.org/

We would very much appreciate any contributions to help offset the cost of producing the podcast. Thanks! paypal.me/collectivenightmares

Thanks for listening. Please let us know your thoughts.

• www.collectivenightmares.com

• IG: @collectivenightmares

• Marshall@collectivenightmares.com

• Laura@collectivenightmares.com

“Horror films are our collective nightmares.”

Episode 110

Keywords

horror, podcast, sociology, social contract, tv show, trust, capitalism, structure, agency, inequity, myth of meritocracy, meritocracy, equality of opportunity, guilt, complicit, existential, pessimism, optimism, communism, capitalism, Korea, sociological imagination, dyads, tryads, gender, family, children

Squid Game – Season 1 (Dong-hyuk 2021)

Join us for the full discussion.

Our first foray into television. This was recorded when Squid Game was at peak popularity. The show is brilliant in execution and rife with sociological content. The series especially excels at drawing connections the show makes between structural circumstances and individual agency, which is the foundation of the sociological imagination. These connections are sometimes taught as the relationships between a buffet (structure) and what people choose to put on their plate (agency). People can only really make choices from the options that are presented to them. In an individualistic culture like the U.S. we focus intently on what people have on their plate, while often completely ignoring the options that were presented in the buffet. Squid Game consistently and clearly makes these connections clear and we are here for it!

This is a long episode and we still definitely didn’t cover all the sociology in it, but we did what we could.

There is lots more of our podcast! Please listen, review, subscribe, and tell your friends.



SPOILERS IN THIS EPISODE

Squid Game (Dong-hyuk 2021)

TOPIC INDEX – Squid Game  (Dong-hyuk 2021) (times are approximate) 

0:30 – Introductions

6:00 – Discussion begins

6:00 – thoughts on the ending

10:30 – laying out our topics

16:00 – structure and agency

18:00 – linking game to society

30:00 – Zimbardo’s prison experiment

32:00 – Mills’ sociological imagination

34:30 – anomie

35:00 – is the Squid Game better?

38:00 – sociological imagination

40:00 – structure vs agency

46:00 – heroes and villains

49:00 – social contract

56:00 – dyads and tryads

57:00 – the ending plot recap

1:13:30 – marble game

1:19:30 – is it horror?

1:23:00 – white collar crime

1:26:00 – structural vs individual violence

1:31:00 – ethnicity and nationality

1:32:00 – Korea, communism, capitalism

1:46:30 – sexuality

14:20 – SPOILERS begin

1:02:00 – filmmaking and plot movement

1:23:10 – grading the series using the Collective Nightmares Evolving Rubric of Social Responsibility

Related Episodes

Wiener Dog (Solondz 2016)

Dark Waters (Haynes 2019)

Credits

Edited and processed with Audacity. Free, cross-platform, open source, and awesome.

https://www.audacityteam.org/

We would very much appreciate any contributions to help offset the cost of producing the podcast. Thanks! paypal.me/collectivenightmares

Thanks for listening. Please let us know your thoughts.

• www.collectivenightmares.com

• IG: @collectivenightmares

• Marshall@collectivenightmares.com

• Laura@collectivenightmares.com

“Horror films are our collective nightmares.”

Episode 110

Keywords

horror, podcast, sociology, social contract, tv show, trust, capitalism, structure, agency, inequity, myth of meritocracy, meritocracy, equality of opportunity, guilt, complicit, existential, pessimism, optimism, communism, capitalism, Korea, sociological imagination, dyads, tryads, gender, family, children

2 hr 25 min