Review
Explores the fate of black women convicted in the southern United States and Georgia in particular. . . . Reconstructs the course of dozens of women.--Champ Penal
Haley offers an important analysis of a particular group of women: prisoners in Georgia from 1868 to the early 20th century. Astutely mining archival records, the author offers no soft edge to chronicle the 'unrepresentable' violence against incarcerate women, especially those of color. Highly recommended.--Choice
Contributes immensely to US southern, economic, gender, and political history.--Southern Spaces
Review
No Mercy Here is a brilliant account of black women and imprisonment. Haley's interdisciplinary breadth has enabled her to produce a history of the carceral system that defines the constituents of Jim Crow modernity, detailing the primacy of gender and sexual violence as techniques of racial terror, capitalist production, and historical dispossession. In its painstaking explication of the emergence of a modern racial order in which black life remains in peril, this groundbreaking text is certain to transform our understanding of the afterlife of slavery.--Saidiya Hartman, author of Lose Your Mother: A Journey Along the Atlantic Slave Route
Sarah Haley's compelling study of black women's quotidian encounters with post-slavery systems of punishment generates original insights regarding the role of gendered carcerality in the persistence of racial violence today. No Mercy Here also reveals a long line of resistance—an unacknowledged dimension of the Black Radical Tradition—from minor disruptions and acts of sabotage to poetic ruptures in the expressive culture of the blues.--Angela Y. Davis, Distinguished Professor Emerita, University of California, Santa Cruz
This fascinating book is a chilling reminder of the relationship between Jim Crow modernity and gendered violence against black women in the carceral South. Haley expands our understanding of racialized labor exploitation and the myriad dismal prison conditions overall.--Cheryl D. Hicks, UNC Charlotte
Sarah Haley's book recovers the wrenching violence and degradation that African American women faced in a criminal justice system built on the rules and logic of white supremacy. It offers critical historical insights about why gender and race matter for understanding mass incarceration today. I have not read a more important book in years.--Tera Hunter, author of To 'Joy My Freedom: Southern Black Women's Lives and Labors after the Civil War
No Mercy Here is the most important contribution to U.S. labor history to appear in the last fifteen years. With theoretical sophistication, breathtaking archival depth, and historical imagination, Sarah Haley tells a compelling story of how the criminal punishment system, through which the state policed and exploited black working-class women, laid the foundation of Jim Crow modernity. But this is also a story of resistance—to captivity, to capital, to the carceral state. Poets, bards, philosophers, saboteurs, these women acted on dreams of revenge, retaliation, and flight; laughed and loved in the face of terror; and built an architecture of opposition that confounded the state.--Robin D. G. Kelley, author of Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times of an American Original
About the Author
Sarah Haley is assistant professor of gender studies and African American studies at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Product details
- Series: Justice, Power, and Politics
- Hardcover: 360 pages
- Publisher: University of North Carolina Press; Illustrated edition (April 29, 2016)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 1469627590
- ISBN-13: 978-1469627595
- Product Dimensions: 6.3 x 1.1 x 9.6 inches
- Shipping Weight: 1 lb 7.3 oz
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