Punishment and Culture
Punishment and Culture traces three centuries of the history of punishment, looking in detail at issues ranging from public executions and the development of the prison to Jeremy Bentham’s notorious panopticon and the invention of the guillotine. Smith contends that each of these attempts to achieve sterile bureaucratic control was thwarted as uncontrollable cultural forces generated alternative visions of heroic villains, darkly gothic technologies, and sacred awe. Moving from Andy Warhol to eighteenth-century highwaymen to Orwell’s 1984, Smith puts forward a dazzling account of the cultural landscape of punishment. His findings will fascinate students of sociology, history, criminology, law, and cultural studies.
Chapter 1. The Penal Imagination
Chapter 2. The Public Execution
Chapter 3. The Prison
Chapter 4. The Panopticon
Chapter 5. The Guillotine
Chapter 6. The Electric Chair
Chapter 7. Punishment and Meaning
Notes
Index
Political Science: Political and Social Theory
Sociology: Criminology, Delinquency, Social Control
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