‘Deadwood’ is more about U.S. now, than then
HBO Western’s themes of media and change parallel modern challenges
![]() | "We're in the presence of the new" Al Swearengen says in "Deadwood." It's more than an observation, it's the series' central theme. |
Doug Hyun |
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NEW YORK - "We're in the presence of the new," the menacingly eloquent Al Swearengen of "Deadwood" says during one recent outburst. He is talking about the interloper George Hearst, but he might as well be referring to just about everything around him.
From its first episode in 2004, the "Deadwood" universe has remained obsessed with the new — the bumpiness of innovation and its uneasy relationship with ancient ways. In short, it mimics America, land of never-ending novelty.
Now, as David Milch's HBO series winds toward its unsettling end this month, it becomes ever more obvious that the show is, beyond anything else, about one of the early 21st century's most urgent issues — the rise of a confusing, overwhelming media society where little is as it appears.
The town — "the camp," they call it, ignoring encroaching civilization — is a roiling landscape of confounding communication. Its denizens are realizing they no longer live on an island and must deal with the larger world.
Sound familiar? We've heard a lot of this in America since that jumbled morning in September 2001. And it's no coincidence that this Western — like so many of decades past — is as much about Us Now as it ever was about Us Then. "Deadwood" is deeply suspicious of the very mass media that gave it life.
A.W. Merrick, the high-minded, hypocritical editor of the Deadwood Pioneer, is portrayed by Jeffrey Jones as an insider's outsider — a man who, even in the 1870s, is grappling with the notion that there are quicker, sexier ways to obtain information than his extremely local newspaper.
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Swearengen (Ian McShane), meanwhile, watches from his perch on the balcony of his Gem Saloon as new telegraph-related contraptions rise. "Messages from invisible sources," he spits, recognizing their threat to local power and control, his in particular.
In the second and third seasons of "Deadwood," this theme became more pronounced with the arrival of fresh stagecoaches, each containing a new metaphor for the outside world — and, more often than not, a new challenge.
On one coach arrives a "velocipede," a precursor to the bicycle, which represents the debut of modern consumer invention in Deadwood. Its owner, barkeeper Tom Nuttall, rides it publicly to initial success until a follow-up ride plays a role in the death of Sheriff Seth Bullock's young stepson.
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