We Are Not Slaves


State Violence, Coerced Labor, and Prisoners' Rights in Postwar America

Price:
Sale price$80.99
Stock:
Available to Order

By Robert T. Chase
Imprint:
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
233 x 155 mm
Weight:
850 g
Pages:
544

Request Academic Copy

Button Actions

Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form

Description

Robert T. Chase is associate professor of history at Stony Brook University.

"A complex story, expertly told from a prodigious body of sources. . . . Chase's We Are Not Slaves tells a multifaceted story of the often untold, or at the very least unacknowledged, resilience of bondage in the post-slavery and even post-civil rights eras. At the same time, We Are Not Slaves is also a story of the boundless capacity and resilience of humans--even the supposedly undeserved. The TDC prisoners' rights movement is a template for all of seeking 'freedom.' Using political protest, labor strikes, testimonies, and legal writing, they bear witness to their own humanity."--Shannon King, Black Perspectives "A rare look at prison conditions and organized activism as told by those held in custody."--Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books "A remarkably detailed and far-reaching account of postwar Texas prison life characterized by extraordinary resistance in the face of pervasive brutality."--Journal of American History "A stunning work of history. Drawing on a rich body of sources including lawsuits, internal prison documents, and an impressive 100 oral histories, Robert Chase demonstrates how an interracial movement of imprisoned people dismantled Texas's brutal plantation model of punishment, which was rooted in coerced labor, sexual violence, and racial hierarchy. . . . In unflinching prose, Chase recounts the haunting stories of imprisoned people who endured rape and abuse at the hands of other prisoners. By reading internal prison documents alongside imprisoned people's own words, Chase pushes back against the older body of sociological scholarship that attributed such acts to prisoners' own 'pathology.' He convincingly shows that Texas prison administrators helped produce such violence by enabling and even encouraging it."--Amanda Hughett, Black Perspectives "An ambitious, deeply researched, and persuasive account of the Texas prison system in the period from the 1940s-1980s. . . . Chase provides one of the most in-depth accounts we have yet had of sexual violence among incarcerated men--a topic many historians of sexuality have touched upon but few have attempted to examine in depth, largely because of the apparent paucity of readily available manuscript sources. Yet Chase's combing of state records and the massive archive produced by Ruiz proves it can be done."--Timothy Stewart-Winter, Black Perspectives "An outstanding work that will provoke discussion and undoubtedly inspire other studies as this country seeks solutions to problems that stem from the nation's experience with incarceration."--Southwestern Historical Quarterly "Chase's brilliant inquiry focuses on the Texas Department of Corrections (TDC) but references correctional practices in other southern states."--CHOICE "Drawing from three decades of legal documents compiled by prisoners, Chase narrates the struggle to change prisons from within. . . . He finds that these insurgents won epochal legal victories but that their movement was overwhelmed by the increasing militarization of the prison system and empowerment of white supremacist gangs that, together, declared war on prison organizers."--Law and Social Inquiry "Successfully marries historical analysis to carceral studies. Chase extends the timeline of incarceration in the United States, picking up from convict leasing to draw broader connections over the longue duree of caged and carceral labor. . . . A welcome contribution to the shift in the discourse of prisoners' rights toward activism and the agency of incarcerated folks."--H-Nationalism "The most thorough and sophisticated look at the Texas prison system of the twentieth century. Chase blends legal and social history, together with sociology and ethnic and gender studies, to place incarcerated people at the center of the tremendous, if bleak, transformations of the state's prisons from plantation barbarism to high-tech isolation. . . . From sexual violence and coerced labor to worker's strikes and lawsuits, from the 'massive resistance' authorities displayed to respecting the human rights of incarcerated people to the internecine violence among prisoners, We Are Not Slaves chronicles the daily rhythms of this carceral capitol with chilling insight."--Dan Berger, Black Perspectives

You may also like

Recently viewed