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Incarceration & Performances of Power: Narratives from Ancient Greece, the Roman Empire, and the Antebellum South

INCARCERATION AND PERFORMANCES OF POWER: Narratives from Ancient Greece, the Roman Empire, and the Antebellum South

Incarceration is inextricably linked to the power of the state, and is arguably the manifestation of the greatest power the state has over a citizen: the power to deprive him of liberty. As Morris and Rothman write, “Prison embodies the largest power the state exercises over its citizens in time of peace.”1 Captivity played a key role in Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome, and the Antebellum South — three societies that differ greatly from each other in terms of their fundamental structures, central beliefs, and primarypolitical concerns. And yet, despite their differences, captivity has consistently been employed as an instrument for the maintenance and...

Far, Far Away

The popular image of immigrant detention is still that of a young, male criminal. However, mothers continue to be a growing population in detention. Detention separates mothers from their children, causing emotional pain to the women separated from the center of their lives. Mothers in detention continue to express their love for their children in various forms, such as art, to keep the love for their children as a beacon of hope in their time in detention. On the outside of the gates of these detention centers, life for the children remains difficult as well. Without a guardian to watch over them these children remain subject to being placed in foster care in one year. According to the Applied Research...

Middle Eastern Asylum Seekers in Arizona

Asylum seekers do not just come from Central and South America, but also from the Middle East. The Mexican immigration authorities say that “Middle Eastern and African Immigrants moving through Mexico have increased nearly 400% from 306 in 2011 to 1,152 as of Jun 2015.”(1) Hisham Shaban Ghalia and Mounis Hammouda are Palestinian asylum seekers from Gaza that fled in 2010 and 2011. They traveled through a total of eight countries in the Middle East, Europe, and South and Central America before arriving at the US-Mexico border in November 2014 requesting humanitarian asylum. They were then detained in Florence Detention Center. (2) Hisham’s asylum claim was denied, and an order of removal has been issued. He cannot be sent back...