Liberal Arts Faculty Books

From Slaveship to Supermax: Mass Incarceration, Prisoner Abuse, and the New Neo-Slave Novel

Title

From Slaveship to Supermax: Mass Incarceration, Prisoner Abuse, and the New Neo-Slave Novel

Files

Description

In his cogent and groundbreaking book, From Slave Ship to Supermax, Patrick Elliot Alexander argues that the disciplinary logic and violence of slavery haunt depictions of the contemporary U.S. prison in late twentieth-century Black fiction. Alexander links representations of prison life in James Baldwin’s novel If Beale Street Could Talk to his engagements with imprisoned intellectuals like George Jackson, who exposed historical continuities between slavery and mass incarceration. Likewise, Alexander reveals how Toni Morrison’s Beloved was informed by Angela Y. Davis’s jail writings on slavery-reminiscent practices in contemporary women’s facilities. Alexander also examines recurring associations between slave ships and prisons in Charles Johnson’s Middle Passage, and connects slavery’s logic of racialized premature death to scenes of death row imprisonment in Ernest Gaines’ A Lesson Before Dying. Alexander ultimately makes the case that contemporary Black novelists depict racial terror as a centuries-spanning social control practice that structured carceral life on slave ships and slave plantations—and that mass-produces prisoners and prisoner abuse in post–Civil Rights America. These authors expand free society’s view of torment confronted and combated in the prison industrial complex, where discriminatory laws and the institutionalization of secrecy have reinstated slavery’s system of dehumanization.

ISBN

9781439914144

Publication Date

11-17-2018

Relational Format

book

Department

English

Publisher

Temple University Press

Disciplines

American Literature | Race and Ethnicity

From Slaveship to Supermax: Mass Incarceration, Prisoner Abuse, and the New Neo-Slave Novel
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