The crisis of imprisonment : protest, politics, and the making of the American penal state, 1776-1941 / Rebecca M. McLennan.
2008
HN59 .M222 2008 (Map It)
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Author
Title
The crisis of imprisonment : protest, politics, and the making of the American penal state, 1776-1941 / Rebecca M. McLennan.
Published
Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2008.
Call Number
HN59 .M222 2008
ISBN
9780521830966 (hardback)
0521830966 (hardback)
9780521537834 (pbk.)
0521537835 (pbk.)
0521830966 (hardback)
9780521537834 (pbk.)
0521537835 (pbk.)
Description
xiii, 505 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
System Control No.
(OCoLC)124036291
Summary
"In the Age of Jackson, private enterprise set up shop in the American penal system. Working hand in glove with state government, by 1900 contractors in both the North and the South would go on to put more than half a million imprisoned men, women, and youth to hard, sweated toil for private gain. Held captive, stripped of their rights, and subjected to lash and paddle, these convict laborers churned out vast quantities of goods and revenue, in some years generating the equivalent of more than $30 billion worth of work. By the 1880s, however, a growing cross-section of American society came to regard the prison labor system as morally corrupt and unbefitting of a free republic: it fostered torture and other abuses, degraded free citizen-workers, corrupted the government and the legal system, and defeated the supposedly moral purpose of punishment. The Crisis of Imprisonment tells the remarkable story of this controversial system of penal servitude - how it came into being, how it worked, how the popular campaigns for its abolition were ultimately victorious, and how it shaped and continues to haunt America's modern penal system."--Jacket.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 473-484) and index.
Record Appears in
Gift
Purchased from the income of the Soll Fund
Gift

The Arthur W. Diamond Law Library
Purchased from the income of the Soll Fund
Table of Contents
Introduction: The Grounds of Legal Punishment
1
1.
Strains of Servitude: Legal Punishment in the Early Republic
14
2.
Due Convictions: Contractual Penal Servitude and Its Discontents, 1818-1865
53
3.
Commerce upon the Throne: The Business of Imprisonment in Gilded Age America
87
4.
Disciplining the State, Civilizing the Market: The Campaign to Abolish Contract Prison Labor
137
5.
Model Servitude: Prison Reform in the Early Progressive Era
193
6.
Uses of the State: The Dialectics of Penal Reform in Early Progressive New York
239
7.
American Bastille: Sing Sing and the Political Crisis of Imprisonment
280
8.
Changing the Subject: The Metamorphosis of Prison Reform in the High Progressive Era
319
9.
Laboratory of Social Justice: The New Penologists at Sing Sing, 1915-1917
376
10.
Punishment without Labor: Toward the Modern Penal State
417
Conclusion: On the Crises of Imprisonment
469
Select Bibliography
473
Index
485