The primary antagonist, Brian Moser, deliberately recreates Dexter’s childhood trauma—the murder of their mother in a shipping container. By leaving crime scenes that mimic Dexter’s past, Brian forces Dexter to confront his repressed memories. This narrative device serves two functions: it explains Dexter’s origin as a killer, and it presents a dark alternative to the Code. Brian kills without restraint, targeting innocents and seeking an emotional bond with Dexter. Season 1’s climax—Dexter choosing to kill Brian rather than abandon his adoptive family—cements the show’s central irony: Dexter’s humanity is proven by his willingness to kill someone he loves, adhering to a code that makes him “better” than other serial killers.
The Morality of the Monster: Performance, Trauma, and Justice in Dexter (Season 1) Dexter - Season
Throughout Season 1, Dexter’s voiceover reveals the gap between his internal emptiness and his external performance—laughing at colleagues’ jokes, dating Rita (a domestic abuse survivor), even faking sexual interest. This performativity aligns with theories of passing in deviance studies (Goffman, 1963). Dexter passes as normal because society expects a killer to look monstrous. The season critiques surface-level morality: the “good” characters (Doakes, LaGuerta) are suspicious of Dexter, while the “innocent” characters (Rita, Angel) trust him completely. This inversion suggests that moral judgment based on appearance or social charm is dangerously unreliable. This performativity aligns with theories of passing in