“<i>No Bond but the Law</i> is a model of research procedure and historical writing.”-Sidney Mintz, author of <i>Sweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History</i> “<i>No Bond but the Law</i> is one of the most interesting and intellectually ambitious works of scholarship to be published in the field of slave and emancipation studies in recent years. Diana Paton has written a book that takes several important conceptual matters and historiographies-emancipation, punishment, gender, and state formation-and puts them together in a remarkably compelling and original way.”-Steven Hahn, author of <i>A Nation under Our Feet: Black Political Struggles in the Rural South from Slavery to the Great Migration</i>
No Bond but the Law reveals the longstanding and intimate relationship between state formation and private punishment. The construction of a dense, state-organized system of prisons began not with emancipation but at the peak of slave-based wealth in Jamaica, in the 1780s. Jamaica provided the paradigmatic case for British observers imagining and evaluating the emancipation process. Paton’s analysis moves between imperial processes on the one hand and Jamaican specificities on the other, within a framework comparing developments regarding punishment in Jamaica with those in the U.S. South and elsewhere. Emphasizing the gendered nature of penal policy and practice throughout the emancipation period, Paton is attentive to the ways in which the actions of ordinary Jamaicans and, in particular, of women prisoners, shaped state decisions.
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction 1
Prison and Plantation 19
Planters, Magistrates, and Apprentices 53
The Treadmill and the Whip 83
Penality and Politics in a “Free” Society 121
Justice and the Jamaican People 156
Conclusion 191
Notes 201
Bibliography 253
Index 281
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Diana Paton is a Lecturer in History at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne in England. She is the editor of A Narrative of Events, since the First of August 1834, by James Williams, an Apprenticed Labourer in Jamaica, published by Duke University Press.