History 245 - U.S. Carceral Culture

Fall
2018
01
4.00
Jen Manion
TTH 02:30PM-03:50PM
Amherst College
HIST-245-01-1819F
WEBS 217
jmanion@amherst.edu
HIST-245-01,SWAG-247-01

(Offered as HIST 245 [US] and SWAG 247) An overview of punishment from the Enlightenment to modern times. Topics include theories of criminality; birth of the penitentiary; growth of carceral culture; role of reform movements; relationship between slavery, abolition, and punishment; rise of criminology, eugenics, and sexology; persistence of poverty among carceral subjects; and the emergence of the contemporary prison industrial complex. Primary sources for consideration include newspaper articles, reform and abolition organizational records, official prison reports, and legal and sociological papers. Secondary readings will be primarily historical with some critical theories of difference and power including critical race theory, feminist theories of intersectionality, queer theory, and contemporary critical prison studies. Two class meetings per week.

Limited to 30 students. Five spaces reserved for Five College students. Fall semester. Professor Manion.

Permission is required for interchange registration during all registration periods.