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Paperback Black Prisoners and Their World: Alabama, 1865-1900 Book

ISBN: 0813919843

ISBN13: 9780813919843

Black Prisoners and Their World: Alabama, 1865-1900

(Part of the The Carter G. Woodson Institute Series: Black Studies at Work in the World Series)

In the late nineteenth century, prisoners in Alabama, the vast majority of them African Americans, were forced to work as coal miners under the most horrendous conditions imaginable. Black Prisoners and Their World draws on a variety of sources, including the reports and correspondence of prison inspectors and letters from prisoners and their families, to explore the history of the African American men and women whose labor made Alabama's prison system the most profitable in the nation. To coal companies and the state of Alabama, black prisoners provided, respectively, sources of cheap labor and state revenue. By 1883, a significant percentage of the workforce in the Birmingham coal industry was made up of convicts. But to the families and communities from which the prisoners came, the convict lease was a living symbol of the dashed hopes of Reconstruction. Indeed, the lease-the system under which the prisoners labored for the profit of the company and the state-demonstrated Alabama's reluctance to let go of slavery and its determination to pursue profitable prisons no matter what the human cost. Despite the efforts of prison officials, progressive reformers, and labor unions, the state refused to take prisoners out of the coal mines. In the course of her narrative, Mary Ellen Curtin describes how some prisoners died while others endured unspeakable conditions and survived. Curtin argues that black prisoners used their mining skills to influence prison policy, demand better treatment, and become wage-earning coal miners upon their release. Black Prisoners and Their World unearths new evidence about life under the most repressive institution in the New South. Curtin suggests disturbing parallels between the lease and today's burgeoning system of private incarceration.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: New

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Customer Reviews

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Superb

Mary Ellen Curtin's Black Prisoners and Their World, Alabama, 1865-1900 delivers precisely the history its title promises. And more: If you fear a too-narrow focus, you needn't be overly concerned. Yes, the book in the main concentrates on post-emancipation, pre-fin-de-siècle Alabama, but it also gives the reader a substantial overview of the period 1901-1928 (1928 being the year Alabama finally took its state and county prisoners out of the coal mines/death camps). If you are at all interested in the sacrifices (in every sense of the word) of black Americans after the Civil War--and especially those of black American prisoners--I unreservedly recommend this book to you. It's everything a work of history should be: Comprehensive within its stated purview; highly erudite; deeply insightful; scrupulously fair; mindful of the limits of the available evidence; and perhaps most important, well written and readily digested. For those who, like me, come to it because they read Douglas Blackmon's Slavery by Another Name--which is essential reading in its own right--it's eye-opening as well. (I should not fail to note also that the epilogue, which discusses the state of the prison industrial complex as of 2000, is hugely informative--not to mention, damningly critical.)
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