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This book examines the coercive and legally sanctioned strategies of exclusion and segregation undertaken over the last two centuries in a wide range of contexts. The political and cultural history of this period raises a number of questions about coercive exclusion. The essays in this collection examine why isolation has been such a persistent strategy in liberal and non-liberal nations, in colonial and post-colonial states and why practices of exclusion proliferated over the modern period, precisely when legal and political concepts of 'freedom' were invented. In addition to offering new perspectives on the continuum of medico-penal sites of isolation from the asylum to the penitentiary, Isolation looks at less well-known sites, from leper villages to refugee camps to Native reserves.
List of illustrations
viii
Notes on contributors ix
Acknowledgements xii
Isolation and exclusion in the modern world: an introductory essay
1(20)
Alison Bashford
Carolyn Strange
PART I Punitive isolation: geographies and subjectivities
21(66)
The disappearance of the prison: an episode in the `civilising process'
23(17)
John Pratt
The politics of convict space: Indian penal settlements and the Andaman Islands
40(16)
Clare Anderson
Beating the system: prison music and the politics of penal space
56(15)
Ethan Blue
Segregating sexualities: the prison `sex problem' in twentieth-century Canada and the United States
71(16)
Elise Chenier
PART II Therapeutic and preventive isolation
87(64)
The ruly and the unruly: isolation and inclusion in the management of the insane
89(15)
Mark Finnane
From `leper villages' to leprosaria: public health, nationalism and the culture of exclusion in Japan
104(15)
Susan L. Burns
`Houses of deposit' and the exclusion of women in turn-of-the-century Argentina
119(14)
Kristin Ruggiero
Cultures of confinement: tuberculosis, isolation and the sanatorium
133(18)
Alison Bashford
PART III Banishment, exile and exclusion
151(74)
Patterns of exclusion on Robben Island, 1654--1992
153(20)
Harriet Deacon
Legal geographies of Aboriginal segregation in British Columbia: the making and unmaking of the Songhees reserve, 1850--1911
173(18)
Renisa Mawani
Palestinian refugee camps: reinscribing and contesting memory and space
191(17)
Randa Farah
`This is not a place for civilised people': isolation, enforced education and resistance among Spanish Gypsies
208(14)
Paloma Gay Y Blasco
Epilogue
222(3)
Carolyn Strange
Index 225


Carolyn Strange teaches at the Centre of Criminology, University of Toronto. She has published on the history of criminal justice in Canada, the U.S. and Australia. She is the editor of Qualities of Mercy: Justice, Punishment and Discretion (1996). She is the principal investigator on a collaborative project that studies prison history tourism at Alcatraz, Port Arthur and Robben Island. Alison Bashford is senior lecturer in the School of Philosophical and Historical Inquiry, University of Sydney. She is author of Purity and Pollution: Gender, Embodiment and Victorian Medicine and Imperial Hygiene: A Critical History of Colonialism, Nationalism and Public Health. She is also co-editor with Claire Hooker of Contagion.