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Coxsackie - The Life and Death of Prison Reform (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,149
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Coxsackie - The Life and Death of Prison Reform (Hardcover)
Series: Reconfiguring American Political History
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Should prisons attempt reform and uplift inmates or, by means of
principled punishment, deter them from further wrongdoing? This
debate has raged in Western Europe and in the United States at
least since the late eighteenth century. Joseph F. Spillane
examines the failure of progressive reform in New York State by
focusing on Coxsackie, a New Deal reformatory built for young male
offenders. Opened in 1935 to serve "adolescents adrift," Coxsackie
instead became an unstable and brutalizing prison. From the start,
the liberal impulse underpinning the prison's mission was
overwhelmed by challenges it was unequipped or unwilling to
face-drugs, gangs, and racial conflict. Spillane draws on detailed
prison records to reconstruct a life behind bars in which
"ungovernable" young men posed constant challenges to racial and
cultural order. The New Deal order of the prison was unstable from
the start; the politics of punishment quickly became the politics
of race and social exclusion, and efforts to save liberal reform in
postwar New York only deepened its failures. In 1977, inmates took
hostages to focus attention on their grievances. The result was
stricter discipline and an end to any pretense that Coxsackie was a
reform institution. Why did the prison fail? For answers, Spillane
immerses readers in the changing culture and racial makeup of the
U.S. prison system and borrows from studies of colonial prisons,
which emblematized efforts by an exploitative regime to impose
cultural and racial restraint on others. In today's era of mass
incarceration, prisons have become conflict-ridden warehouses and
powerful symbols of racism and inequality. This account challenges
the conventional wisdom that America's prison crisis is of
comparatively recent vintage, showing instead how a racial and
punitive system of control emerged from the ashes of a progressive
ideal.
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