Dehumanizing the poor (of color): HBO’s The wire on carceral expansion in the neoliberal age and other such 'Paradoxes'


Motyl, Katharina


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DOI: https://doi.org/10.26522/posthumanismjournal.v2i1.4087
URL: https://journals.library.brocku.ca/index.php/posth...
Additional URL: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/392932939...
URN: urn:nbn:de:bsz:180-madoc-710190
Document Type: Article
Year of publication: 2023
The title of a journal, publication series: Interconnections : Journal of Posthumanism = Interconnexions : Revue de Posthumanisme
Volume: 2
Issue number: 1: Posthuman economies, literary and cultural perspectives
Page range: 78-95
Place of publication: St. Catharines
Publishing house: Brock University
ISSN: 2564-260X
Publication language: English
Institution: School of Humanities > Amerikanische Literatur- und Kulturwissenschaft (Schäfer, S. 2024-)
Pre-existing license: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Subject: 820 English literature
Keywords (English): The Wire , neoliberalism , War on Drugs , black posthumanism , criminal justice system , dehumanization
Abstract: Although carceral expansion in the United States’ neoliberal age appears paradoxical at first glance, building on Loïc Wacquant, this paper highlights that the Reagan and Clinton administrations instrumentalized punitive criminal justice to evoke a (racialized) sense of security in light of the social insecurity their neoliberal policies had created (neoliberal punitive turn). The paper then analyzes the TV series The Wire’s negotiation of the interlocking effects of neoliberalism and the “War on Drugs”; the show maintains that neoliberalism has fuelled the drug trade and other crime, while the “War on Drugs” has reproduced the very social conditions it was implemented to combat. Finally, the paper argues that the neoliberal punitive turn’s paradoxicality indeed resides in the affective regimes it has conjured, which position corporations as persons deserving of public aid (read: empathy), while the poor (of Color) are dehumanized and not only denied empathy, but even punished for their poverty.




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