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Capturing Labor: A History of Unfree Work in the Southwest [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 280 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x30 mm, kaal: 567 g, 12 b&w illus.
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-Apr-2026
  • Kirjastus: University of Texas Press
  • ISBN-10: 1477333452
  • ISBN-13: 9781477333457
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 280 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x30 mm, kaal: 567 g, 12 b&w illus.
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-Apr-2026
  • Kirjastus: University of Texas Press
  • ISBN-10: 1477333452
  • ISBN-13: 9781477333457
Teised raamatud teemal:
A collection of essays grappling with the many, often overlooked, forms of unfree labor in the West.

When Americans think of unfree laborcoerced, extracted from workers unable to freely enter and exit contractswhat comes to mind is Black slavery and peonage in the South. But other forms of unfree labor also built the United States. Collecting a diverse range of sharply argued historical essays, Capturing Labor shares the story of unfree labor in the Southwest, affecting mainly Indigenous people, Mexican Americans, and people of color.

In Texas and elsewhere, state agents developed various methods for directing the movement of workers, seizing their time, and controlling the products of their efforts. Case studies highlight the detention during World War I of Indigenous children and unaccompanied women, who were placed in boarding schools, fined, and obligated to work off the resulting debt. Other essays expose authorities forcing workers to break strikes and jailing Americans who supported labor uprisings in rural Mexico and the United States. Prisons and asylums supplied coerced agricultural workers and musicians who were never compensated for their labor or by the labels that took their recordings.

Editors Jessica Pliley and John Mckiernan-GonzÁlez contend that unfree labor continues to shape American life, and is all around us today. Understanding its history aids us in recognizing and bringing attention to the grim realities of the present.

Arvustused

"Remarkable in its scope, analysis, and ambition, Capturing Labor sheds new light on systems of coerced labor and how central they have been to the histories of race, politics, and capitalism in the American Southwest. Not a specialist in the history of the American Southwest? You will still want to read the essays contained in this volume, as each, in its own way, challenges us to think about the history of coerced labor in new, fascinating, and important ways." - Stephen C. Beda, University of Oregon, author of Strong Winds and Widow Makers: Workers, Nature, and Environmental Conflict in Pacific Northwest Timber Country

"Capturing a persistent history of unfree labor, this outstanding collection questions triumphalist interpretations of freedom by documenting slavery, peonage, indentured, contract, unpaid, and carceral arrangements well into the twentieth century. The Southwest emerges as central to capital accumulation through the bodies of Black, Mexican, Indigenous, and poor white workers. The brothel, "Native" boarding school, "feebleminded" asylum, and the prison join fields, restaurants, and factories as sites of coercion and exploitation, reinforced by law but subject to the struggles of working people themselves. In the process, Pliley and Mckiernan-González powerfully demonstrate the ways that reproductive labor feeds into racial capitalism." - Eileen Boris, UC Santa Barbara, author of Making the Woman Worker: Precarious Labor and the Fight for Global Standards, 19192019

Introduction (Jessica R. Pliley and John Mckiernan-GonzÁlez)
I. Troubling Contracts: Limiting Worker Mobility in the Labor Market

1. Constructing Coercion: Labor Regimes and Sex Workers at the US-Mexico
Borderlands (Erik Bernardino)
2. Cottons Paradise: Coerced Labor and the Right to Live During the Great
Depression in El Paso, Texas, 19311933 (Yolanda ChÁvez Leyva)
3. We Never Had No Payday Here: Folk Song, Forced Labor and the Carceral
State in Texas (Jason Mellard)
4. Mario CantÚ and the Struggle Against Unfree Labor in San Antonio, Tejas,
and Mexico, 19691984 (Jerry GonzÁlez)


II. Imprisoning Housework: (Re)producing Unfreedom

5. The Curse of Cane: Sugar, Race, and the Bittersweet Legacy of Prison
Segregation in Texas, 18711926 (Jermaine Thibodeaux)
6. The Carceral Rescue Industry: World War I-Era Anti-Prostitution Campaigns
in Texas (Ánh Adams and Jessica R. Pliley)
7. Native Women and Unfree Labor: The Haskell Indian Boarding School
Experience (Bethany Eby)
8. Nobody Paid Me Anything: Forced Labor in California Institutions for
the Feebleminded (Natalie Lira)


Epilogue: Chasing (and Being Chased by) SlaveryA Borderlands Journey (Luis
C. de Baca)
Acknowledgments
Index
Jessica R. Pliley is a professor of women's and gender history at Texas State University. She is the author of Policing Sexuality: The Mann Act and the Making of the FBI and the coeditor of Fighting Modern Slavery and Human Trafficking: History and Contemporary Policy and Global Anti-Vice Activism, 18901950: Fighting Drinks, Drugs, and "Immorality."

John Mckiernan-González is the director of the Center for the Study of the Southwest and an associate professor of history at Texas State University. He is the author of Fevered Measures: Public Health and Race at the Texas-Mexico Border, 18481942 and coeditor of Precarious Prescriptions: Contested Histories of Race and Health in North America.