Summary and Analysis of The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness: Based on the Book by Michelle Alexander
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This short summary and analysis of The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander includes:
- Historical context
- Chapter-by-chapter summaries
- Detailed timeline of key events
- Profiles of the main characters
- Important quotes
- Fascinating trivia
- Glossary of terms
- Supporting material to enhance your understanding of the original work
About The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander:
Legal scholar and civil rights lawyer Michelle Alexander’s invaluable and timely work, The New Jim Crow, examines what she calls the new racial caste system in United States: mass incarceration.
Following the practices of slavery and institutional discrimination, Alexander argues, mass incarceration is part of America’s legacy to dehumanize and disenfranchise African Americans and Latinos. According to Alexander, “we have not ended racial caste in America; we have merely redesigned it.”
Thanks in a large part to the War on Drugs, more than two million people are in America’s prisons today—an overwhelming majority of them are people of color who’ve been jailed for minor drug charges. When these adults leave prison, they are often denied employment, housing, the right to vote, and a quality education. As a result, they are rarely able to integrate successfully into society.
The New Jim Crow is a well-argued call to dismantle a system of policies that continues to deny civil rights, decades after the passing of the Civil Rights and Voting Rights Acts.
The summary and analysis in this ebook are intended to complement your reading experience and bring you closer to a great work of nonfiction.
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Summary and Analysis of The New Jim Crow - Worth Books
Contents
Context
Overview
Summary
Timeline
Cast of Characters
Direct Quotes and Analysis
Trivia
What’s That Word?
Critical Response
About Michelle Alexander
For Your Information
Bibliography
Copyright
Context
Michelle Alexander’s The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness was first published in 2010, fifty-five years after the racial segregation laws known as Jim Crow
were officially removed, two years after Barack Obama was elected as the first African American president, and in an age when diversity is notable on college campuses, in politics, and in business, entertainment, sports, and other highly visible areas of American life.
However, as Alexander states in her introduction, In the era of colorblindness, it is no longer socially permissible to use race, explicitly, as a justification for discrimination, exclusion, and social contempt.
As a proxy for race, society relies instead on brushes with the legal system to deny rights to those labeled as criminals—much in the way that basic civil rights were denied to African Americans since the days of slavery.
High levels of poverty and imprisonment of people of color—in particular, black men—demonstrate that the Jim Crow laws of racial segregation are alive and well in twenty-first-century America.
In a 2012 interview with NPR’s Fresh Air, Alexander said, Today there are more African-Americans under correctional control—in prison or jail, on probation or parole—than were enslaved in 1850, a decade before the Civil War began. There are millions of African Americans now cycling in and out of prisons and jails or under correctional control.
The so-called War on Drugs began in the age of Richard Nixon, but was accelerated by President Ronald Reagan in the 1980s, even though drug use was in decline. During his tenure, the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986 was passed, setting the stage for mandatory minimum sentencing for a number of drug offenses.
Now, some thirty years later, with strict sentencing guidelines and other law enforcement practices, such as stop-and-frisk
and zero-tolerance
policies, the number of people of color who are incarcerated eclipses that of white citizens—despite data that suggests drug usage among these groups is not so uneven.
Not only are the statistics around mass incarceration staggering, but the institutionalized discrimination baked in to the American criminal justice system, she observes, perpetuates a caste system in place for generations.
Overview
Michelle Alexander’s The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness explores history, mechanisms, and consequences of what she identifies as a new racial caste system in the United States of America. Mass incarceration,