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Book Cover for: Captive Nation: Black Prison Organizing in the Civil Rights Era, Dan Berger

Captive Nation: Black Prison Organizing in the Civil Rights Era

Dan Berger

In this pathbreaking book, Dan Berger offers a bold reconsideration of twentieth century black activism, the prison system, and the origins of mass incarceration. Throughout the civil rights era, black activists thrust the prison into public view, turning prisoners into symbols of racial oppression while arguing that confinement was an inescapable part of black life in the United States. Black prisoners became global political icons at a time when notions of race and nation were in flux. Showing that the prison was a central focus of the black radical imagination from the 1950s through the 1980s, Berger traces the dynamic and dramatic history of this political struggle.

The prison shaped the rise and spread of black activism, from civil rights demonstrators willfully risking arrests to the many current and former prisoners that built or joined organizations such as the Black Panther Party. Grounded in extensive research, Berger engagingly demonstrates that such organizing made prison walls porous and influenced generations of activists that followed.

Book Details

  • Publisher: University of North Carolina Press
  • Publish Date: Mar 15th, 2016
  • Pages: 424
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 9.27in - 6.22in - 1.04in - 1.34lb
  • EAN: 9781469629797
  • Categories: African American & BlackUnited States - 20th CenturyPenology

About the Author

Berger, Dan: - Dan Berger is assistant professor of comparative ethnic studies at the University of Washington Bothell.

More books by Dan Berger

Book Cover for: Outlaws of America: The Weather Underground and the Politics of Solidarity, Dan Berger
Book Cover for: Stayed on Freedom: The Long History of Black Power Through One Family's Journey, Dan Berger
Book Cover for: The Struggle Within: Prisons, Political Prisoners, and Mass Movements in the United States, Dan Berger

Praise for this book

"Thanks to Dan Berger's illuminating book . . . we can no longer tell the history of the black freedom struggle -- and the 20th-century United States more broadly -- without taking into account the organizing tradition inside prisons." -- Elizabeth Hinton, The Nation
"Multidimensional analysis that takes into account feminist, queer, and multiethnic lenses." -- Journal of American History
"A provocative and compelling history of black activism in the US prison system." -- CHOICE
"Helps connect the broader scholarship on black freedom struggles with a largely taken for granted segment of the activist population, prisoners." -- Journal of Social History
"[An] impressive account of black prison activism." -- Public Books
"Demonstrates convincingly that historians in diverse areas and fields must reckon with [incarceration as a] defining feature of American life." -- American Historical Review
"Captive Nation is a bold reconsideration of the role of prisons and African-American prisoners spanning the southern Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and '60s, Black Power and the New Left, and the Black Nationalist renaissance of the 1970s." -- Against the Current
"Dan Berger's analysis offers an opportunity to consider the ways that incarcerated African Americans, primarily during the 1970s, insisted that we consider the ways that prisons implicated state power in the production of racial inequality." -- The Black Scholar
"Berger undoubtedly achieves his overarching goal: to tell the story of the 'multifaceted rebellions that occurred in and through America's prisons.'" -- Punishment and Society
"Finally affords the civil rights era the attention it deserves as a critical point on the historical arc of race and incarceration in America." -- The Sixties