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Tony Soprano’s America Tony Soprano’s America Gangsters, Guns, and Money M. Keith Booker Isra Daraiseh ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD Lanham • Boulder • New York • London Published by Rowman & Littlefield A wholly owned subsidiary of The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc. 4501 FORBES BOULEVARD, SUITE 200, LANHAM, MARYLAND 20706 www.rowman.com Unit A, Whitacre Mews, 26-34 Stannary Street, London SE11 4AB Copyright © 2017 by Rowman & Littlefield All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote passages in a review. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Information Available Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Booker, M. Keith author. | Daraiseh, Isra, 1988– author. Title: Tony Soprano’s America : gangsters, guns, and money / M. Keith Booker and Isra Daraiseh. Description: Lanham : Rowman & Littlefield, 2017. | Includes bibliographical references and index. Identifiers: LCCN 2016039443 (print) | LCCN 2016051719 (ebook) | ISBN 9781442273221 (hardback : alk. paper) | ISBN 9781442273238 (electronic) Subjects: LCSH: Sopranos (Television program) Classification: LCC PN1992.77.S66 B66 2017 (print) | LCC PN1992.77.S66 (ebook) | DDC 791.45/72—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016039443 TM The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992. Printed in the United States of America For Isra Daraiseh, my partner in crime —M. Keith Booker For Keith Booker, ﻢﻠﻌﺘﻧ ﻚﻨﻣ ﺎﻨﺣاو …ﻢﻠﻌﻣ ﺖﻧا —Isra Daraiseh Introduction After a bean-ball incident against the St. Louis Cardinals on September 18, 2015, Chicago Cubs manager Joe Maddon compared the Cardinals (longtime hated rivals of the Cubs) to gangsters: “I don’t know who put out the hit. I don’t know if Tony Soprano was in the dugout, but I didn’t see him in there. But we’re not going to put up with that.” References to the gangsters of the HBO series The Sopranos do in fact abound in contemporary American culture, making clear that, by the time the series ended its run in 2007, it had supplanted the Godfather saga as the best-known gangster narrative in American popular culture. This prominence of course is not surprising, given the almost universal critical acclaim received by the series, including the declaration by Stephen Holden in the New York Times (after only the first season of the series) that the show might just be “the greatest work of American popular culture of the last quarter century.” The debut of The Sopranos in January 1999 helped to usher in one of the most interesting years in American cultural history. Much of the year, of course, was dominated by anticipation of the coming end of the millennium—even if, strictly speaking, the twentieth century and the millennium in which it was situated did not technically end until the end of 2000. This anticipation, meanwhile, included both the obligatory revving up for the Apocalypse among certain religious sects, though in this case the new age of computers introduced a novel element to apocalyptic anxiety with the so-called Y2K scare. The much-anticipated Star Wars: Episode I—The Phantom Menace was the top film at the box office in 1999. The undistinguished American Beauty would win the Oscar for Best Picture of the year, though a number of more interesting films were released during 1999, including Fight Club, Being John Malkovich, Magnolia, and Three Kings, not to mention game- changing genre films such as The Matrix and The Blair Witch Project. In television, the game-show spectacle Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? premiered in August 1999 and became the sensation of the coming television season. For many, however, the X-Files episode “Millennium,” broadcast on November 28 but set at the coming of the new year, was the highlight of the season, punctuated by a first kiss between Mulder and Scully at the stroke of midnight on December 31, 1999. Afterward, Mulder looks around and notes that “the world didn’t end,” referring both to the coming of the new millennium and to the long-anticipated kiss. That kiss might have changed The X-Files forever, but numerous commentators have suggested that The Sopranos changed television forever, bringing new standards of quality and sophistication to a medium that, in the view of many, was sorely lacking in such standards. Indeed, The Sopranos was almost certainly the single most important series in the rise of what came to be known as “quality TV,” part of a wave of programs from HBO that led Robert J. Thompson to argue that the term “HBO-style series” had, by 2007, “trumped” the term “quality TV” as a descriptor for “high artistic achievement in the medium” (xviii). This volume seeks to delineate some of the key reasons why The Sopranos is so important in television history, while also exploring some of the most important ways in which The Sopranos resonates with American cultural history as a whole. Running from 1999 to 2007, The Sopranos is set in the world of that period and engages with a number of contemporary events, ranging from the Bill Clinton/Monica Lewinsky scandal, to the 9/11 bombings and subsequent war on terror, to Native American protests over the celebration of Columbus Day. But this involvement with specific current events is relatively superficial and incidental. The Sopranos is less interested in a vivid depiction of the way specific events in the larger world affect the day-to-day lives of its characters than it is in placing these lives within a much bigger historical narrative, and within the context of much bigger and more fundamental issues. The Sopranos deals in a realistic way with a number of serious, life-or-death issues within the experiences of its characters, but perhaps the central reason that the series has such a sense of gravity and importance is that it addresses so many issues that have been fundamental to the march of modern history—and on a number of different levels. The series, for example, is crucially informed by the struggle between tradition and modernity that has perhaps been the central struggle of the entire modern era of history. On a more local scale, it engages in dialogues with the entire history of gangsterism in America, as well as with the entire history of the representation of gangsterism in American popular culture. Meanwhile, the business of organized crime is set in dialogue with American business as a whole, providing one of popular culture’s most trenchant and detailed interrogations of the role of capitalism in American history, even if it provides no answers to the questions it poses and suggests no real alternatives to the capitalist system that it questions. The series is also highly conscious of the fraught history of race relations in the United States, focusing on the Italian American immigrant experience as a component of America’s multiracial and multicultural society. It is, of course, not surprising that a work of popular culture such as The Sopranos should deal with such important and fundamental issues. After all, as Richard Slotkin has noted, film narratives describing the immigrant experience in America, while becoming more and more prominent since the 1970s, have been dominated by the gangster genre, which has initiated a “cult of the Mafia” in which organized crime becomes a locus for the attempted preservation of Old World values presumably lost in the transition to America: These films invest the gangster heritage of Italian, Jewish, and Irish immigrants with nostalgia for a lost world of close and extended family ties and with immigrant-group solidarity in the face of poverty, displacement, and discrimination. (634) Further, Slotkin notes that “the lament for the loss or Further, Slotkin notes that “the lament for the loss or corruption of the immigrant patriarchy in these films parallels, in both mood and ideological function,” a similar lament that can be found in certain Westerns (639). Slotkin here is thinking especially of the Godfather films, though his description of the central role played by nostalgia might apply equally well to The Sopranos—except for the fact that everything in the latter is given an extra hyper-ironic twist by the fundamentally postmodern nature of the series, which tends to undermine its own nostalgia. It is certainly the case that The Sopranos places all of the themes and issues with which it deals within the context of a specific nostalgic narrative of recent American history, but in this case a nostalgia for the Old World of Italy is doubled with a nostalgia for bygone days in America itself. In this narrative, Italy certainly functions as a bastion of traditional values and virtues that have now been lost. However (as is often the case in the American popular mind as a whole), the 1950s are seen as a sort of past Golden Age in which all aspects of life (including organized crime) were simpler and better. The subsequent half-century is then seen as a period of unmitigated decline, in which every aspect of life became more complicated and less functional, and things generally fell apart. To this extent, The Sopranos is a rather cynical account of the failure of the American dream—and even of the longer-term failure of the Enlightenment ideal of continual progress toward a better (and eventually ideal) human society. At the same time, the series posits very little in the way of a genuine historical narrative prior to the 1950s, noting specific events (such as the large-scale arrival of Italian immigrants in the United States in the early years of the twentieth century) without placing them within any coherent model of historical change, other than to gesture repeatedly toward an absolutely anterior past when the traditional patriarchal structure of an essentially feudal Italy was still in place. To complicate matters still further, the series shows considerable skepticism toward both of its nostalgic models of historical decline. This undermining of its fundamental historical narrative is part of a general resistance to final interpretation that is a key to the vaunted complexity of The Sopranos, a complexity that is itself crucial to the widespread acclaim of the series as a watershed event in television (and pop cultural) history. This complexity arises partly from the extremely complicated structure of the program itself and partly from its extensive interaction with its historical and cultural context. For example, the series’ resistance to final interpretations is an important indicator of the postmodern nature of the series, on which numerous commentators have remarked. Indeed, it is our contention throughout the current study that The Sopranos can best be understood as a paradigmatic work of postmodernist culture, an identification that not only brings into focus many aspects of the series, but also helps to clarify the historical position of the series as an indicator of the status of culture within the global expansion of capitalism at the beginning of the twenty-first century. This phase of capitalist globalization has been widely described as “late capitalism,” and it should be pointed out here that our understanding of postmodernism is very much in accord with the seminal theorization of postmodernism as the “cultural logic of late capitalism” developed by Fredric Jameson more than a quarter of a century ago, but more relevant (and accurate) today than ever. For Jameson, postmodernism is the culture of a historical climate in which the process of capitalist modernization is nearly complete, a suggestion that is very much in line with the vision of things coming to an end that lies at the heart of The Sopranos. Moreover, Jameson’s description of the characteristics of postmodernist culture (Postmodern) illuminates The Sopranos in a number of other important ways as well. Of course, one might argue that television itself is largely a postmodern phenomenon. Perry Anderson, amid a strong endorsement of Jameson’s understanding of postmodernism, has argued that, in the historical evolution of postmodernism, television was “the development that changed everything. . . . If there is any single technological watershed of the postmodern,

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Widely regarded as one of the greatest television series of all time, The Sopranos is also considered one of the most significant achievements in contemporary American culture. IThe series spearheaded the launch of a new wave of quality programming that has transformed the way people watch, experien
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