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The Wire

A Cultural History

ebook
1 of 2 copies available
1 of 2 copies available

A critical and insightful exploration of arguably the greatest television show of the twenty-first century.

In the two decades since The Wire first aired, the show has only continued to grow in cultural relevance as America has seen domestic terrorism increase, race relations become ever tenser, political populism become increasingly sectarian, health inequalities worsen, incarceration rates for Black Americans skyrocket, and grassroots racial activism grow.

In The Wire: A Cultural History, Ben Lamb explores how the twenty-first century's greatest television show changed international perceptions of American policing, drug laws, and race relations forever, and instigated our obsessive streaming of television series. Starting with David Simon's life story and how he came to devise The Wire, Lamb takes readers through the casting process for the show's iconic characters and uncovers the stories behind their real-life counterparts; journeys through a complete history of the American cop show to deduce which key programs The Wire emulates; traces the economic, social, and racial history of Baltimore from the port to the school system; and outlines how the show's interest in newspapers predicted the rise of populism across world politics.

Filled with fascinating behind-the-scenes anecdotes and critical insights, everyone from die-hard fans to casual viewers will learn something new about how The Wire has impacted university courses, the city of Baltimore itself, the Black Lives Matter movement, worldwide drug trafficking laws, and our modern television landscape. As America faces its biggest socio-economic crossroads in generations, this is a must read for television fans interested in how our favorite shows reflect our shifting cultures and politics.

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    • Library Journal

      Starred review from January 1, 2025

      British crime-series maven Lamb (You're Nicked: Investigating British Television Police Series) suggests that the HBO series The Wire (2002-08) has themes from Greek mythology and, more credibly, Dickensian social realism and forms an evolutionary link in U.S. programs from Dragnet through NYPD Blue. Unlike them, this surveillance show is steeped in the grittiness of unindustrialized Baltimore and the still contemporary challenges of racism, the ineffective War on Drugs, changing social and sexual roles, and generational loss of expectations. David Simon, former police reporter for the Baltimore Sun, and Ed Burns, a veteran homicide detective who became a schoolteacher, produced The Wire's 60 episodes with insider acuity. Initially attracting an average audience, it featured a Black cast including many untrained locals, plus actors who only later became famous (such as Idris Elba and Michael B. Jordan). Lamb states that each of the five seasons focuses on fallible institutions and how they adversely affect people--the drug trade structure, the Baltimore port and the decline of the working class, city government, bureaucracy, the school system, and the newspaper industry. VERDICT This timely retrospective on inner city reality as a cultural phenomenon will appeal to media scholars and crime show fans.--Frederick J. Augustyn Jr.

      Copyright 2025 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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Languages

  • English

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