States of Incarceration is coming to Wilmington, NC
States of Incarceration is coming to the University of North Carolina Wilmington! Stay tuned for more information and a new local story!
States of Incarceration is coming to the University of North Carolina Wilmington! Stay tuned for more information and a new local story!
Pre-modern prisons were markedly different from the system of hyper-incarceration in the United States today. The patterns of pre-modern captivity varied radically across eras and continents, but they consistently reflected the religious, economic, and political tenets of their respective societies. The manifestations of these cultural values within prisons had a profound effect on individuals, who in turn shaped their societies’ understandings of captivity. By analyzing the physical and social structures of pre-modern prisons and the experiences of those in captivity, we gain enough historical context to realize that current system of mass incarceration in the United States is not an inevitable outcome.
Our Point of View
We are undergraduates from diverse academic backgrounds, aware of contemporary national issues of mass incarceration and their ties to history. In the Fall of 2015, we learned alongside students at the Adult Correctional Institute of Rhode Island, reading historical and fictional prison narratives, examining complementary images, and exploring the global history of captivity in order to better understand prison as a social and political tool from the pre-modern era to the contemporary moment.
Prison is the ultimate intrusion of the state into the lives of its citizens.
— Bert Useem and Anne Morrison Piehl, The Prison State, 2008