The Carceral City: Slavery and the Making of Mass Incarceration in New Orleans, 1803-1930

John K. Bardes
University of North Carolina Press

Americans often assume that slave societies had little use for prisons and police because slaveholders only ever inflicted violence directly or through overseers. Mustering tens of thousands of previously overlooked arrest and prison records, John K. Bardes demonstrates the opposite: in parts of the South, enslaved and free people were jailed at astronomical rates.

Read more at University of North Carolina Press

Previous
Previous

Talkin’ Greenwich Village: The Heady Rise and Slow Fall of America’s Bohemian Music Capital

Next
Next

Brassroots Democracy: Maroon Ecologies and the Jazz Commons