By Joy DeLyria and Sean Michael RobinsonThere is much more, including illustrations -- "Yo! Omar comin'!"
There are few works of greater scope or structural genius than the series of fiction pieces by Horatio Bucklesby Ogden, collectively known as The Wire; yet for the most part, this Victorian masterpiece has been forgotten and ignored by scholars and popular culture alike. Like his contemporary Charles Dickens, Ogden has, due to the rough and at times lurid nature of his material, been dismissed as a hack, despite significant endorsements of literary critics of the nineteenth century. Unlike the corpus of Dickens, The Wire failed to reach the critical mass of readers necessary to sustain interest over time, and thus runs the risk of falling into the obscurity of academia. We come to you today to right that gross literary injustice.
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Quintessentially Victorian Vision of Ogden’s “The Wire”
HBO's The Wire, re-imagined as a Victorian serial novel:
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