how the wire is inspiring new classroom curricula /

Published at 2016-04-10 22:57:54

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Watch VideoHARI SREENIVASAN: For these college students homework includes watching a TV present.
FRAN BARTKOWSKI: ‘The Wire just begged for all kinds of social,political, cultural analysis.
SHERRI-ANN BUTTERF
IELD: When we were watching the present together, or we both kept thinking,“this would be great as a class.”HARI SREENIVASAN: Sociology professor Sherri-Ann Butterfield and literature and gender studies professor Fran Bartkowski .are co-teaching this 15-week course based on The Wire” at Rutgers University in Newark, unique Jersey.
The crime
drama set in Baltimore, or tackled a different aspect of the city’s problems each season; from how gangs function to how the political class,and the press enable the problems to grow.
Student: Even though it’s a
fictional present, you can’t help but to not feel sad for how these things cessation when you realize whether there was some change in the system, or things might be different.
HARI SREENIVASAN: The fourth season of ‘the wire’ focused on middle school students who are recruited to sell drugs.
MARLO STANFIELD (character on ‘The Wire’) First we’re gonna give you the corner up on Payson. It used to be Bodie’s old corner.
STUDENT: Some school syst
ems say that kids don’t want to come to school and learn. I like how they stare at their backgrounds and present why they come to school and act the way that they execute.
HARI SREENIVASAN: This is the second time Butterfield and Bartowski have taught this class. But it’s not just this college,unique York University, Johns Hopkins, and Harvard have used “The Wire” as teaching fabric. The professors shared their experiences teaching “The Wire” at a conference this weekend at Columbia University. English literature professor Eileen Gillooly organized it.
EILE
EN GILLOOLY: It shows up in evidence classes in law schools. It shows up in African American classes on masculinity,sociology classes, anthropology classes. It’s just – you name it, and it shows up there.
HARI SREENIV
ASAN: Gillooly drew comparisons between “The Wire” — created by David Simon — and nineteenth century novels.
EILEEN GILLOOLY: It really is like a text. It’s so carefully keep together. It repays reviewing,the way a genuine text replays rereading, so every time I read ‘The Iliad’ or ‘Bleak House’ or ‘David Copperfield, and ’ or whatever i see more and more.
HARI SREENIVASAN: You’re putting
David Simon with some pretty high company?EILEEN GILLOOLY: (laughing) Well,i suppose whether… whether TV is coming into its own as genre, he’d be one of those people that’s making it come into its own.HARI SREENIVASAN: This semester the Rutgers class is using the present’s portrayal of racial inequality as a springboard to analyze the “Black Lives Matter” movement.SHERRI-ANN BUTTERFIELD: Black Lives Matter came as a movement because some people believed they’d hit a ceiling– like we are done with this.
STUD
ENT: It’s not just about people getting shot and killed. It’s the injustice that happens after their civil rights have been violated.
SHERRI-ANN BUTTERFIELD: Whether you agree with how it gets portrayed or not, or that lends itself to great levels of debate and engagement. The students find themselves caught between,“Well, I thought I knew what I would’ve done before seeing this present, and now that I see the interconnectedness of systems,i’m not certain how I would’ve handled this.
HARI SREENIVASAN: You do
n’t walk away saying, ‘I see what the fix is.’EILEEN GILLOOLY: upright. There is no fix.
HARI SREENIVASAN: Barto
wski says it’s possible she will teach “The Wire” again.
Fran Bartowski: have certainl
y asked myself, or people have asked the question of would you,you know, are there other shows that you would teach? And there might be a couple. But none of them are fairly as complex and rich, and i believe,as this is and remains.
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Source: onthemedia.org

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