Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

The Depth of the Hole: Intertextuality and Tom Waits's "Way Down in the Hole"

2010; Wayne State University Press; Volume: 52; Issue: 3-4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1353/crt.2010.0050

ISSN

1536-0342

Autores

James B. Peterson,

Tópico(s)

Contemporary Literature and Criticism

Resumo

The opening theme music for hBo's series The Wire is a song written by Tom Waits entitled "Way Down in the hole" (1987).each year during the series' five-season run, the producers selected or solicited a different version of the song.as a series, The Wire is often interpreted as lacking a space for representations of black spirituality.each of the five seasons features complex institutional characterizations and explorations of the Street, the Port, the law, the hall (i.e., politics), the School, and/or the Paper (i.e., media).Through these institutional characters and the individual characters that inhabit, construct, and confront them, The Wire depicts urban america, writ large across the canvas of cultural and existential identity.For all of its institutional complexity, The Wire then serially marginalizes black spirituality in favor of realism, naturalism, and some may argue, nihilism. 1"Way Down in the hole" is a paratextual narrative that embodies this marginalization and creates a potential space for viewers (and listeners) of the show, one that frames each episode and the entire run, through literary and spiritual black musical contexts.The multiple versions of "Way Down in the hole" ultimately function as a marginalized repository for the literary and spiritual narratives that are connected to the series-narratives that become legible via intertextual analyses and in turn render visible The Wire's least visible entities: black spirituality and the Black Church. 2 In an attempt to engage this marginality and its attendant space for black literary and spiritual content, I critically engage various versions of "Way Down in the hole," the numerous artists who perform the song, and the spiritual aesthetics central to each version of the song.Moreover, each artist's interpretation or treatment of this song constitutes an intertextual relationship with developments in african american music. 3Thus, "Way Down in the hole" is an african american musical text-an

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