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| Book Review | The Journal of American History, 88.3 | The History Cooperative
88.3  
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December, 2001
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Book Review


Cop Knowledge: Police Power and Cultural Narrative in Twentieth-Century America. By Christopher P. Wilson. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000. xii, 281 pp. Cloth, $42.00, ISBN 0-226-90132-7. Paper, $16.00, ISBN 0-226-90133-5.)

In Cop Knowledge, Christopher P. Wilson takes on the job of linking cultural theory to the history of policing in the twentieth-century United States. A professor of English and American studies, Wilson has reached across academic disciplines to understand how postindustrial Americans have understood the role of police in society, how police articulate professionalism and ethics, and how stories about policing create a cultural apparatus that shapes judicial outcomes. These stories, which constitute "cop knowledge," circulate among the cultural producers, subjects, and audiences Wilson examines: policy makers, beat cops, journalists and other mass culture producers, and social scientists. Stories police tell about themselves, he argues, "play off of and feed back from media formations, becom[ing] not separate from the everyday routines of police work, but actually encoded in them." . . .


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