Rima L. Vesely-Flad is professor and chair of religious studies and director of peace and justice studies at Warren Wilson College. She holds a PhD in social ethics from Union Theological Seminary and was the founder of Interfaith Coalition of Advocates for Reentry and Employment (ICARE) in New York State.
Description
Introduction1. A Theory of Moral Pollution2. Constructions of Character and Criminality in the Nineteenth-Century U.S. Penal Systems3. Institutionalizing Pollution Boundaries: Contemporary Policing, Imprisonment, and Reentry Systems4. Policing Polluted Bodies in Polluted Spaces: Stop-and-Frisk in New York City, 1993-20135. Confronting Pollution: Protest as the Performance of Purity in the Black Lives Matter Movement6. Seeing Jesus in Michael Brown: New Theological Constructions of Blackness7. Conclusion: Reconstructing the Image of the Polluted Black BodyIndex

