Politics in Captivity: Plantations, Prisons, and World-Building

Lena Zuckerwise
Fordham University Press

From the 1811 German Coast Slave Rebellion to the 1971 Attica Prison Uprising, from the truancy of enslaved women to the extreme self-discipline exercised by prisoners in solitary confinement, Black Americans have, through time, resisted racial regimes in extraordinary and everyday ways. Though these acts of large and small-scale resistance to slavery and incarceration are radical and transformative, they have often gone unnoticed. This book is about Black rebellion in captivity and the ways that many of the conventional well-worn constructs of academic political theory render its political dimensions obscure and indiscernible.

Read more at Fordham University Press

Previous
Previous

King of the North: Martin Luther King Jr.’s Life of Struggle Outside the South

Next
Next

In Silence or Indifference: Racism and Jim Crow Segregated Public School Libraries