Watchmen, copaganda, and abolitionist futurities in U.S. Television

Jessica Hatrick, Olivia González

Research output: Journal PublicationArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Through this article, we examine the history and conventions of copaganda in the United States, and critically consider how HBO’s Watchmen has responded to and represented the historical relationship between policing and white supremacy. We argue that while Watchmen works to explicitly critique the history of white supremacist violence in US policing, the show reproduces several copaganda conventions. Watchmen depicts central law enforcement characters who commit violence as heroes, uplifts the main police character as an eventually almighty arbiter of justice, portrays white supremacist law enforcement characters as anomalous individual infiltrators (a.k.a. “bad apples”), and was created in collaboration with various members of law enforcement. After presenting this case study in contemporary copaganda, we consider how science fiction series can more meaningfully respond to the movement for police and prison abolition through representing abolitionist futures.
Original languageEnglish
JournalLateral: Journal of the Cultural Studies Association
Publication statusPublished - 2022

Keywords

  • abolition
  • copaganda
  • film
  • police
  • science fiction
  • television

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Cultural Studies

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