"<i>On the Wire</i> is a readable, rigorously argued account of HBO’s seminal series. . . . Williams is noted for being a top scholar in film and media studies, but <i>On the Wire</i> demonstrates that above all else she is a passionate fan of the series. In order to explain why she loves it so much, and why it has impacted American culture with such force, she’s written a must-read book for everyone who believes that <i>The Wire</i> is life-changing fiction of the highest order." - Jon Lisi (PopMatters) "Linda Williams’s book revolutionizes the ways we approach the series. Hers is a provocative, productive analysis that makes an essential contribution to the sociology of television: not only how to think of television as social force but its own ability to constitute sociological investigation." - Dana Polan (Film Quarterly) “By tying <i>The Wire’</i>s forcefulness to its televisual and melodramatic nature, <i>On The Wir</i>e reveals that however exceptional, this show can also be a model. As such, this book modestly saves the series from monumentality.” - Nathan Holmes (Critical Inquiry) "Williams’ s study... provides a view of <i>The Wire</i> that is often illuminating and surprising…" - Stanley Corkin (Journal of American Studies) “As an avid fan of the series <i>The Wire</i>, Linda Williams’s book was a thoroughly interesting read. … In each section, the author skillfully weaves the storyline from episodes into her argument in a believable and defensible fashion. … Williams’s volume offers a unique perspective on a beloved series.” - Amy Muckleroy Carwile (Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly) “<i>On The Wire</i> is an ambitious study that makes an original, compelling argument about a series on which much has already been written. The questions Williams sets out in the early part of her monograph both pay tribute to <i>The Wire</i> and make clear that she is willing to probe the assumptions often made about it. ...Pushing back against the critical consensus, <i>On The Wire</i> is not just an original study of its chosen series but also a model for how we should think about contemporary television more generally.” - George Potts (Critical Quarterly) “Williams’s<i> On The Wire</i> is a fascinating text. Whether she is lauding the series for its capacity to ruffle certain cinematic conventions and assumptions about race and class or criticizing the show for its diminished gender politics (e.g., blaming the single black mother), her analysis is coherent, trenchant, and provocative. … For those interested in the series and those interested more generally in film and media studies, American culture, and the intersection of race and class, <i>On The Wire</i> will be an enjoyable and provocative read.” - Joseph Winters (African American Review) “<i>On The Wire</i> is not only an important work for any study of <i>The Wire</i>, but is also an important offering for television scholarship. Furthermore, <i>On The Wire</i> provides strong analysis of the role of melodrama in society, and establishes an illuminating vocabulary for depictions of race in popular culture.” - Alex Moran (49th Parallel)
Introduction 1
Part I. World Enough and Time: The Genesis and Genius of The Wire
1. Ethnographic Imagination: From Journalism to Television Serial 11
2. Serial Television's World and Time: The Importance of the "Part" 37
Part II. Justice in The Wire: Tragedy, Realism, and Melodrama
3. "Classical" Tragedy, or . . . 79
4. Realistic, Modern Serial Melodrama 107
Part III. Surveillance, Schoolin', and Race
5. Hard Eyes / Soft Eyes: Surveillance and Schoolin' 139
6. Feeling Race: The Wire and the American Melodrama of Black and White 173
Conclusion: Home Sweet Baltimore 211
Notes 223
Bibliography 247
Index 255