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Wire, The: Race, Class, and Genre


Wire, The: Race, Class, and Genre

Hardback by Kennedy, Liam; Shapiro, Stephen

Wire, The: Race, Class, and Genre

£77.00

ISBN:
9780472071784
Publication Date:
24 Aug 2012
Publisher:
The University of Michigan Press
Pages:
296 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 28 - 30 May 2024
Wire, The: Race, Class, and Genre

Description

Few other television series have received as much academic, media, and fan celebration as The Wire, which has been called the best dramatic series ever created. The show depicts the conflict between Baltimore's police and criminals to raise a warning about race; drug war policing; de-industrialisation; and the inadequacies of America's civic, educational, and political institutions. The show's unflinching explorations of a city in crisis and its nuanced portrayals of those affected make it a show all about race and class in America. The essays in this volume offer a range of astute critical responses to this television phenomenon. More consistently than any other crime show of its generation, The Wire challenges viewers' perceptions of the radicalisation of urban space and the media conventions that support this. The Wire reminds us of just how remarkably restricted the grammar of race is on American television and related media, and of the normative codings of race-as identity, as landscape-across urban narratives, from documentary to entertainment media.

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