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The carceral city : slavery and the making of mass incarceration in New Orleans, 1803-1930

Title
The carceral city : slavery and the making of mass incarceration in New Orleans, 1803-1930 / John K. Bardes.
ISBN
9781469678177
1469678179
9781469678184
1469678187
9781469678191
9798890886972
Publication
Chapel Hill : The University of North Carolina Press, [2024]
Physical Description
x, 416 pages : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm.
Summary
"Americans often assume that slave societies had little use for prisons and police because slaveholders only ever inflicted violence directly or through overseers. Mustering tens of thousands of previously overlooked arrest and prison records, John Bardes demonstrates the opposite: in parts of the South, enslaved and free people were jailed at astronomical rates. Slaveholders were deeply reliant on coercive state action. Authorities built massive slave prisons and devised specialized slave penal systems to maintain control and maximize profit. Indeed, in New Orleans--for most of the past half-century, the city with the highest incarceration rate in the United States--enslaved people were incarcerated at higher rates during the antebellum era than are Black residents today. Moreover, some slave prisons remained in use well after Emancipation: in these forgotten institutions lie the hidden origins of state violence under Jim Crow. With powerful and evocative prose, Bardes boldly reinterprets relations between slavery and prison development in American history. Racialized policing and mass incarceration are among the gravest moral crises of our age, but these crises are not new: slavery, the prison, and race are deeply interwoven into the history of American governance"-- Provided by publisher.
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
April 01, 2024
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
The Problem of Incarceration in the Age of Slavery
A Line of Demarcation in Punishments: Slavery and the Penitentiary Movement, 1820-61
Soi-Disant Libre: Travelers of Color, Free Status, and the Slave Prison
Idle and Dangerous: Poor White Workers, Freedom's Limits, and Vagrancy Law
From Marronage to Vagrancy: Policing Freedom in Wartime Louisiana, 1862-65
We Are All Vagrants: Reconstructing Police Power, 1865-77
Aftershocks of Marronage: Labor Coercion in the Jim Crow City.
Citation

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