ABSTRACT

This innovative new work suggests that The Wire reflects, not simply a cultural take on contemporary America, but a structural critique of the conditions of late-modernity and global capitalism. As such, it is a visual text worth investigating and exploring for its nuanced examination of power, difference and inequality. 

Deylami & Havercroft bring together nine essays addressing issues of interest to a range of academic fields in order to engage with this important cultural intervention that has transfixed audiences and sparked debate within the social scientific community. While the TV show is primarily focused upon the urban politics of Baltimore, the contributors to this volume read Baltimore as a global city. That is, they argue that the relations between race, class, power, and violence that the series examines only make sense if we understand that inner city Baltimore is a node in a larger global network of violence and economic inequality. The book is divided into three interrelated sections focusing on systemic and cultural violence, the rise and decline of national and state formations, and the dysfunctional and destructive forces of global capitalism.

Throughout the series the relation of the urban to the global is constantly being explored. This innovative new volume explains clearly how The Wire portrays this interaction, and what this representation can show social scientists interested in race, neo-liberal processes of globalization, criminality, gender, violence and surveillance.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Everything is connected

part |48 pages

Building states, crumbling nations

chapter |30 pages

“It can't be a lie”

The Wire as breaching experiment

chapter |16 pages

Classroom democracy

Demystifying the civic nation in The Wire

part |70 pages

Neoliberalism, capitalist power, and social resistance

chapter |28 pages

The politics of knowledge production

On structure and the world of The Wire

chapter |19 pages

Corruption as solidarity

An inverted republicanism to resist inverted totalitarianism

chapter |21 pages

The limits of neoliberalism

Market rationality in The Wire

part |39 pages

Precarious intersections

chapter |18 pages

“It's all in the game”

Masculinism, mourning, and violence in The Wire

chapter |19 pages

The missing women of The Wire

Gender and limits of verisimilitude