A Bound Woman Is a Dangerous Thing: The Incarceration of African American Women from Harriet Tubman to Sandra Bland

Author(s): DaMaris B. Hill

History

A revelatory work in the tradition of Claudia Rankine's Citizen, DaMaris Hill's searing and powerful narrative-in-verse bears witness to American women of color burdened by incarceration.


"It is costly to stay free and appear sane."


From Harriet Tubman to Assata Shakur, Ida B. Wells to Sandra Bland and Black Lives Matter, black women freedom fighters have braved violence, scorn, despair, and isolation in order to lodge their protests. In A Bound Woman Is a Dangerous Thing, DaMaris Hill honors their experiences with at times harrowing, at times hopeful responses to her heroes, illustrated with black-and-white photographs throughout.


For black American women, the experience of being bound has taken many forms: from the bondage of slavery to the Reconstruction-era criminalization of women; from the brutal constraints of Jim Crow to our own era's prison industrial complex, where between 1980 and 2014, the number of incarcerated women increased by 700%.


For those women who lived and died resisting the dehumanization of confinement--physical, social, intellectual--the threat of being bound was real, constant, and lethal.


 

General Information

  • : 9781635574616
  • : Bloomsbury Publishing USA
  • : Bloomsbury Publishing USA
  • : 0.01
  • : 01 January 2020
  • : ---length:- '8.25'width:- '5.51'units:- Inches
  • : books

Other Specifications

  • : DaMaris B. Hill
  • : English
  • : 192

$25.00 NZD

Stock: 0


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