A History of Prisons and Imprisonment
This book offers a sweeping journey through the history of imprisonment, tracing how societies have moved from temporary holding dungeons to the massive prison complexes of today. Readers will explore the origins of confinement in ancient Greece and Rome, the medieval gaols run for profit, and the shift toward seeing incarceration itself as punishment that began with Enlightenment thinkers like Beccaria and Howard. The narrative follows the birth of the penitentiary in America, contrasting the Pennsylvania System’s solitary reflection with the Auburn System’s silent labor, and examines how Jeremy Bentham’s Panopticon shaped modern surveillance ideals.
The work delves into the global spread of the prison model, showing how European nations adapted American designs, how penal colonies in Australia and Devil’s Island served as dumping grounds for unwanted populations, and how debtors’ prisons reflected class‑based coercion. It also confronts the brutal realities of wartime prison camps like Andersonville and Elmira, the post‑Civil War convict lease system that re‑enslaved African Americans, and the totalitarian extremes of the Soviet Gulag and Nazi concentration camps, revealing how the prison can be twisted into an instrument of terror and exploitation.
Moving into the modern era, the book analyzes the rise of the medical model of rehabilitation, the Attica uprising that ignited prisoners’ rights activism, and the War on Drugs that fueled mass incarceration and stark racial disparities. It examines the hidden experiences of women behind bars, the expansion of private, for‑profit prisons, and the ethical and psychological debates surrounding long‑term solitary confinement and supermax facilities. Readers will also encounter alternative approaches, notably the Scandinavian emphasis on normality and dynamic security, which challenge prevailing assumptions about punishment.
Finally, the volume looks toward the future, discussing decarceration efforts, problem‑solving courts, electronic monitoring, restorative justice, and the ongoing debate over whether the prison itself can be reformed or must be abolished. By the end, readers will have a deep, nuanced understanding of how prisons reflect broader social, economic, and political forces, and they will be equipped to think critically about justice, reform, and the possibilities for a more humane response to crime.
May 17, 2026
48,279 words
3 hours 23 minutes
Click to order this hardcover:
Buy NowPrint copy ships within 1-3 business days.
$5 account credit for all new MixCache.com accounts!