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Policing Freedom

Autor Martine Jean
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 13 noi 2025
Policing Freedom explores the history of punishment in Brazil, intersecting with studies on the global history of punishment, which historicize the prison as existing within a continuum of punitive strategies to discipline Brazil's racially diverse working-class. Key reading for students and scholars of the Atlantic slave trade.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781009289153
ISBN-10: 1009289152
Pagini: 366
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.49 kg
Editura: Cambridge University Press

Cuprins

Introduction. The rogues' gallery; 1. The politics of slavery, race, nation, and prison building; 2. Confinement, labor, and citizenship; 3. Prison labor and the politics of slavery; 4. Disciplining children and engendering racialized citizenship; 5. Adelino Mwissicongo and the afterlife of emancipation; Conclusion. Slavery's punitive afterlife; Appendix.

Recenzii

'Brazil has one of the highest prison populations in the world -it comes third, after the US and China. Adopting a micro-global approach, Policing Freedom masterfully connects the history of prisons with the crisis of slavery and the transformations in labor regimes in the Atlantic world during the nineteenth century.' Sidney Chalhoub, Harvard University
'In this tenaciously researched and haunting study of 'slavery's afterlives in punishment,' Martine Jean tells the stories of those confined in Rio de Janeiro's first modern-style penitentiary. Rio's Casa de Correção was an urban construction site, a social experiment, a warehouse of people, and ultimately, Jean shows, a crucible for post-abolition society.' Amy Chazkel, Columbia University
'This book is an invaluable contribution to the study of police and political control of the popular classes, mainly but not only Africans and Afrodescendants, in the largest slaving city of the Atlantic basin, Rio de Janeiro. It combines with originality a discussion of the end of the transatlantic slave trade, the decline of slavery, and the formation of an immense, modern prison complex aimed at maintaining seignorial dominion.' João José Reis, Universidade Federal da Bahia