Popular Culture Review Vol. 16, No. 2, Summer 2005 | Page 49

Jacques Derrida Visits Cicely: The Deconstruction of N orthern E xposure “We were Mayberry R.F.D. with a Ph.D.,” Barry Corbin once joked Vi/hon describing the prime time comedy series Northern Exposure} Corbin, one of the series regulars, was highlighting the blend of intellectual sophistication and gentle comedy that transformed a well worn narrative motif into entertainment for the brain as well as for the heart. Indeed. More than once the series, which aired on CBS from July 1990 until July 1995, was praised by both viewers and critics for its intellectual chutzpah. It often took up subjects— language, cultural linguistics, history, psychoanalysis, art, and literature to name a few that appeared frequently—more likely to be discussed by graduate students in a humanities seminar than by characters on a popular television program. On at least one occasion, CBS itself was applauded for stepping boldly where other networks feared to tread; it aired a story about Deconstruction. This particular episode surprised humanities professor Sanford Pinsker who gave CBS much credit for airing it. “I kept wondering,” he said, “if PBS, for all the brouhaha about its elitism, would dare run the same episode, with its tough questioning about the ‘objective correlative’ and generous references to the likes of Jacques Derrida and Roland Barthes. I suspect PBS would not, but CBS, in fact, did.”^ And the series did not restrict its interest to ivory tower topics. The show, said one viewer, covered “broad themes such as the meaning of life, concern for the environment, and respect for religious and ethnic differences.” Its “complex” plots dealt with “meaningful issues,” said another, ^^^lo praised the series for having “the guts to tackle the hard issues.”^ Critics agreed with the viewers’ assessment. The New York Times" John J. O’Connor, for instance, commended the series for commenting “courageously” and “insightfully on matters like education, culture and art,” and Betsy Williams found in its episodes a “rigorous negotiation of social, sexual, and spiritual issues.”^ This kind of praise must have gratified co-creators Joshua Brand and John Falsey, as ideas were intended to be as important to the series as its characters. “Ideas scare networks” and “they offend people,” Brand said in defense of the series’ intellectual orientation, but they “are legitimate things to explore dramatically.”^ The narrative premise was simple. A self-absorbed and somewfrat arrogant newly minted Jewish physician from New York named Joel Fleischman is coerced into spending several years practicing medicine in the isolated Alaskan community of Cicely (pop. 856) to work off the money the state lent him to pay for medical school. His exile forces him to grapple with an assortment of free-thinking, articulate individuals with well stocked intellects whose views of the cosmos and the life it harbors are often in conflict with his own supposedly more educated, sophisticated views. Thus are a variety conflicts