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In the early twentieth century, the brutality of southern prisons
became a national scandal. Prisoners toiled in grueling, violent
conditions while housed in crude dormitories on what were
effectively slave plantations. This system persisted until the
1940s when, led by Texas, southern states adopted northern prison
design reforms. Texas presented the reforms to the public as
modern, efficient, and disciplined. Inside prisons, however, the
transition to penitentiary cells only made the endemic violence
more secretive, intensifying the labor division that privileged
some prisoners with the power to accelerate state-orchestrated
brutality and the internal sex trade. Reformers' efforts had only
made things worse--now it was up to the prisoners to fight for
change. Drawing from three decades of legal documents compiled by
prisoners, Robert T. Chase narrates the struggle to change prison
from within. Prisoners forged an alliance with the NAACP to contest
the constitutionality of Texas prisons. Behind bars, a prisoner
coalition of Chicano Movement and Black Power organizations
publicized their deplorable conditions as "slaves of the state" and
initiated a prison-made civil rights revolution and labor protest
movement. These insurgents won epochal legal victories that
declared conditions in many southern prisons to be cruel and
unusual--but their movement was overwhelmed by the increasing
militarization of the prison system and empowerment of white
supremacist gangs that, together, declared war on prison
organizers. Told from the vantage point of the prisoners
themselves, this book weaves together untold but devastatingly
important truths from the histories of labor, civil rights, and
politics in the United States as it narrates the transition from
prison plantations of the past to the mass incarceration of today.
This volume considers the interconnection of racial oppression in
the U.S. South and West, presenting thirteen case studies that
explore the ways in which people have been caged and incarcerated,
and what these practices tell us about state building, coercive
legal powers, and national sovereignty. As these studies depict the
institutional development and state scaffolding of overlapping
carceral regimes, they also consider how prisoners and immigrants
resisted such oppression and violence by drawing on the
transnational politics of human rights and liberation, transcending
the isolation of incarceration and the boundaries of domestic law.
Contributors: Dan Berger, Ethan Blue, George Diaz, David Hernandez,
Kelly Lytle Hernandez, Pippa Holloway, Volker Janssen, Talitha
LeFlouria, Heather McCarty, Douglas Miller, Vivien Miller, Donna
Murch, and Keramet Ann Reiter
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