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Over the past three decades, the United States has embraced the
death penalty with tenacious enthusiasm. While most of those
countries whose legal systems and cultures are normally compared to
the United States have abolished capital punishment, the United
States continues to employ this ultimate tool of punishment. The
death penalty has achieved an unparalleled prominence in our public
life and left an indelible imprint on our politics and culture. It
has also provoked intense scholarly debate, much of it devoted to
explaining the roots of American exceptionalism. America's Death
Penalty takes a different approach to the issue by examining the
historical and theoretical assumptions that have underpinned the
discussion of capital punishment in the United States today. At
various times the death penalty has been portrayed as an
anachronism, an inheritance, or an innovation, with little
reflection on the consequences that flow from the choice of words.
This volume represents an effort to restore the sense of capital
punishment as a question caught up in history. Edited by leading
scholars of crime and justice, these original essays pursue
different strategies for unsettling the usual terms of the debate.
In particular, the authors use comparative and historical
investigations of both Europe and America in order to cast fresh
light on familiar questions about the meaning of capital
punishment. This volume is essential reading for understanding the
death penalty in America. Contributors: David Garland, Douglas Hay,
Randall McGowen, Michael Meranze, Rebecca McLennan, and Jonathan
Simon.
Over the past three decades, the United States has embraced the
death penalty with tenacious enthusiasm. While most of those
countries whose legal systems and cultures are normally compared to
the United States have abolished capital punishment, the United
States continues to employ this ultimate tool of punishment. The
death penalty has achieved an unparalleled prominence in our public
life and left an indelible imprint on our politics and culture. It
has also provoked intense scholarly debate, much of it devoted to
explaining the roots of American exceptionalism. America's Death
Penalty takes a different approach to the issue by examining the
historical and theoretical assumptions that have underpinned the
discussion of capital punishment in the United States today. At
various times the death penalty has been portrayed as an
anachronism, an inheritance, or an innovation, with little
reflection on the consequences that flow from the choice of words.
This volume represents an effort to restore the sense of capital
punishment as a question caught up in history. Edited by leading
scholars of crime and justice, these original essays pursue
different strategies for unsettling the usual terms of the debate.
In particular, the authors use comparative and historical
investigations of both Europe and America in order to cast fresh
light on familiar questions about the meaning of capital
punishment. This volume is essential reading for understanding the
death penalty in America. Contributors: David Garland, Douglas Hay,
Randall McGowen, Michael Meranze, Rebecca McLennan, and Jonathan
Simon.
Between 1750 and 1820, tides of revolution swept the Atlantic
world. From the new industrial towns of Great Britain to the
plantations of Haiti, they heralded both the rise of democratic
nationalism and the subsequent surge of imperial reaction. In
Imagining the British Atlantic after the American Revolution, nine
essays consider these revolutionary transformations from a variety
of literary, visual, and historical perspectives. On topics ranging
from painting and poetry to prison reform, the essays challenge and
complicate our understandings of revolution and reaction within the
transatlantic imagination. Drawing on examples from different local
and regional contexts, they demonstrate the many remarkably local
ways that revolution and empire were experienced in London,
Pennsylvania, Pitcairn Island, and points in between. Published by
the University of Toronto Press in association with the UCLA Center
for Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Studies and the William
Andrews Clark Memorial Library.
Michael Meranze uses Philadelphia as a case study to analyze the
relationship between penal reform and liberalism in early America.
In Laboratories of Virtue, he interprets the evolving system of
criminal punishment as a microcosm of social tensions that
characterized the early American republic. Engaging recent work on
the history of punishment in England and continental Europe,
Meranze traces criminal punishment from the late colonial system of
publicly inflicted corporal penalties to the establishment of
penitentiaries in the Jacksonian period. Throughout, he reveals a
world of class difference and contested values in which those who
did not fit the emerging bourgeois ethos were disciplined and
eventually segregated.By focusing attention on the system of public
penal labor that developed in the 1780s, Meranze effectively links
penal reform to the development of republican principles in the
Revolutionary era. His study, richly informed by Foucaultian and
Freudian theory, departs from recent scholarship that treats penal
reform as a nostalgic effort to reestablish social stability.
Instead, Meranze interprets the reform of punishment as a
forward-looking project. He argues that the new disciplinary
practices arose from the reformers' struggle to contain or
eliminate contradictions to their vision of an enlightened, liberal
republic.
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