Cruel and Unusual: Punishment and U.S. CulturePluto Press, 2004 M01 20 - 287 páginas From the excesses of Puritan patriarchs to the barbarism of slavery and on into the prison-industrial complex, punishment in the US has a long and gruesome history. In the post-Vietnam era, the prison population has increased tenfold and the death penalty has enjoyed a renaissance. Few subjects in contemporary US society provoke as much controversy as punishment. In this context, Cruel and Unusual aims to offer the first comprehensive exploration of the history of punishment as it has been mediated in American culture. Grounding his analysis in Marxist theory, psychoanalysis and Foucault’s influential work on discipline, Brian Jarvis examines a range of cultural texts, from seventeenth century execution sermons to twenty-first century prison films, to uncover the politics, economics and erotics of punishment. This wide-ranging and interdisciplinary survey constructs a genealogy of cruelty through close reading of novels by Hawthorne and Melville, fictional accounts of the Rosenberg execution by Coover and Doctorow, slave narratives and prison writings by African Americans and the critically neglected genre of American prison films. In the process, Cruel and Unusual unmasks a fundamental conflict between legends of liberty in the Land of the Free and the secret, silenced histories of sadomasochistic desire, punishment for profit and social control. |
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... original 1,800 colonists had survived . The early colonial period witnessed acute labour shortages and these were resolved , in part , by the deportation of convicts . Seventeenth - century English law saw a steady increase in the ...
... original 1,800 colonists had survived . The early colonial period witnessed acute labour shortages and these were resolved , in part , by the deportation of convicts . Seventeenth - century English law saw a steady increase in the ...
Página 149
... original catechisms at Salem . Michael Clark suggests that the lawyer views the scrivener ' the same way a Puritan magistrate would as a sign hiding its true significance'.34 Correspondences with the witch trials increase when ...
... original catechisms at Salem . Michael Clark suggests that the lawyer views the scrivener ' the same way a Puritan magistrate would as a sign hiding its true significance'.34 Correspondences with the witch trials increase when ...
Contenido
The Birth of a Prison Nation | 1 |
The Scarlet Letter and the Long Forever of Puritan | 15 |
The Public Burning | 55 |
Derechos de autor | |
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African-American Alien³ alongside American antebellum Bartleby Benito Cereno Billy Budd body capital punishment carceral cell chain gang Cited colonial contemporary convict Cool Hand Luke Coover crime criminal critique cruelty culture Daniel Dead Man Walking death row Dimmesdale disciplinary Discipline and Punish Douglass erotic Escape from Alcatraz fantasies father figure film's flogging Following Foucault Freud genre Green Mile guards Hawthorne Hawthorne's Hester history of punishment Hollywood Ibid images imprisonment incarceration inmates insists justice labour Last Dance liberty Luke's lynching male masochism masochistic master Melville Melville's murder Natural Born Killers oedipal offers pain penal penitentiary system plantation political pre-crime prison drama prison film prisoner-hero Public Burning punishment practices punitive Puritan recognises regime role Rosenbergs sadistic Scarlet Letter scene seems sentence sexual Shawshank Redemption slave narrative slavery social suggests surveillance symbolic torture Truman Show University Press victim violence warden whilst whip White-Jacket women York