Lexington Books
Pages: 374
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-4985-4560-0 • Hardback • April 2017 • $129.00 • (£99.00)
978-1-4985-4562-4 • Paperback • February 2020 • $51.99 • (£40.00)
978-1-4985-4561-7 • eBook • April 2017 • $49.00 • (£38.00)
Dominique Gendrin is professor emeritus in communication studies at Xavier University of Louisiana.
Catherine Dessinges is associate professor in the Department of Information and Communication Studies at Jean Moulin Lyon 3 University.
Shearon Roberts is assistant professor of mass communication at Xavier University of Louisiana.
Forward - Dave Walker, TV writer, The Times-Picayune
Preface - Dominique M. Gendrin, Catherine Dessinges, and Shearon Roberts
Chapter 1: Introduction - Dominique M. Gendrin, Catherine Dessinges, and Shearon Roberts
Treme: Power and Representation
Chapter 2: Selling Tremé through the Home Box Office - Shearon Roberts
Chapter 3: Treme Tourism and Governing the Post-Katrina City - Helen Morgan Parmett
Chapter 4: New Tourist Sights, Slights, and Sleights-of-Hand in Treme - Lynnell Thomas
Chapter 5: Racialization of Urban Spaces in Treme - Dominique M. Gendrin
Chapter 6: Treme and Its Engaged Audience - Catherine Dessinges
Chapter 7: Social Change and Networks in Treme - Kristin Shamas
Treme: Culture and Representation
Chapter 8: Treme: Reclaiming the Foundations of Music in Treme - Gregory Adamo
Chapter 9: Treme as an Experimental TV Series - Ariane Hudelet
Chapter 10: Multiple Representations of Mardi Gras in Treme - Aurelie Godet
Chapter 11: Treme: Narrative Blackness in the Great American Cable Television Drama - Johnny Jones
Chapter 12: A Feminist Perspective on Treme - Wendy Hajjar
This edited collection focused on the HBO series Treme offers 12 essays from American and French scholars. The authors tackle how the series represents race, gender, and culture as well as how it exists within HBO’s broader programming strategy. Several chapters explore how the actual Treme neighborhood in New Orleans has responded to the filming and has adjusted to the new neighborhood tourism that resulted from the series. Other chapters examine how the social and economic repercussions of Hurricane Katrina are intertwined in the content and the storytelling structure. Of course, a central theme of the series is the music of New Orleans and the role of Mardi Gras, and the three chapters that explore these topics directly are particularly noteworthy for their analysis and insights. Thankfully, the authors resist the auteurist hagiography of David Simon, which can often materialize in scholarship about his work. Instead, when taken as a whole this collection offers a thoughtful exploration of the series and is a valuable contribution to studies of HBO programming. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty.
— Choice Reviews
As a New Orleans native, one of the biggest struggles observed post-Katrina is the battle on behalf of the natives to hold on to the city’s authentic cultural heritage. The writers offer honest perspective and explore the dilemma that results when those who are attracted to what they see on a TV show like Treme attempt to make perception reality by moving to a place like New Orleans and unintentionally eroding the culture they so long to experience in the process. Such critical perspective is long overdue.
— Kim M. LeDuff, Vice President of Academic engagement and Chief Diversity Officer, University of West Florida
This poignant collection of essays succinctly illustrates the juxtaposition between televised historical fiction and the real life struggles of a city trying to regain its footing following one of the worst natural disasters in modern American history. The authors offer compelling analysis of the depiction of post-Katrina New Orleans in David Simon’s 'Treme' and carefully explicate the uniqueness and sometimes ornery culture of the city still learning lessons from the storm. Every scholar of media and cultural studies should read this book. This is social, cultural, and political critique at its very best.
— Cheryl Jenkins, University of Southern Mississippi