Five academics from England and the U.S. write 20 highly-informed, pithy essays on the popular TV genre of “cop shows” over the past 50 years. As Sabin notes in his “Introduction” and as the essays demonstrate, with respect to such shows, the term genre does not mean generic. The cop shows over the past, post-War decades beginning with “Dragnet” through the recent “The Wire” and the current “Justified” reflect changes in American society over this time.
Introducing the essays, Sabin notes too that the cop shows uniquely reflect the “social contract” between the country’s citizens and other residents and law-enforcement and the legal system. This aspect of the shows is dealt with, but does not define or restrict the content of the essays or imply a dominating theme or perspective. For the articles necessarily varied in content considering the changes in American society including changing demographics, views toward authority, interests in different personalities and female characters, and curiosities about ways of life in cities and rural areas are as much essays on popular culture and cultural studies. In the course of the essays, one sees the low-key, quietly authoritative Sgt. Friday of “Dragnet” becomes replaced by the more individualistic characters of Kojak and Columbo, the feminist team Cagney and Lacey, the cool, atmospheric “Miami Vice,” and the more recent gritty urban dramas with ensemble casts including woman and ethnic characters. More than entertainment, in the elements of fetching, sometimes challenging characters, plots, locations, and such, the shows grappled with social interests of their day—which is the theme running through the diverse essays binding them together.
By academics followed by notes on “Recommended Episodes” and “Further Reading,” the essays are not light reading; though they are not arcane since their subject matter is so familiar, a part of American popular culture, absorbed into it. Who even though she may not have been born when he had his day is not familiar with “Dragnet” and Sgt. Friday at once conventional and inimitable?
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