Free Joan Little:种族、性暴力和监禁的政治学》,克里斯蒂娜-格林著(评论)

IF 0.8 2区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY Pub Date : 2024-07-16 DOI:10.1353/soh.2024.a932604
Debra L. Schultz
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She escaped the death penalty through an international support campaign and a successful claim of self-defense against sexual assault, catalyzing important debates about such rights.</p> <p>Greene writes engagingly, using the Joan Little case to make incisive intersectional contributions in several historiographies. She states, for example, “By the 1970s, female activists on both sides of the prison walls drew on the women’s liberation, civil rights, and Black Power movements to fashion a politics that included incarcerated women” (p. 83). By making visible southern Black women’s prison and anti-rape organizing, she challenges the declension theory of the Black freedom movement after the late 1960s, writes Black women’s leadership into second-wave feminism—particularly the antiviolence movement—and honors Black women’s contributions to critiquing state violence as embodied by the growing prison industrial complex.</p> <p>The book is organized into three sections. The first demythologizes Joan Little (in the spirit of recent scholarship on Rosa Parks), illuminating how her case inspired alliances among many 1970s movements. The second sketches the foundations of a women’s tradition of prison organizing at the nexus of civil rights and Black Power. The third chronicles how a robust, multi-issue Black feminist movement led the way on organizing against sexual violence targeting women of color, part of a long tradition of Black women’s resistance to racialized and sexualized violence, including lynching. An epilogue on the 1994 Crime Bill and the Violence Against Women Act challenges readers to think critically about gender and carceral politics today.</p> <p>The themes of visibility and voice weave throughout the narrative. The reader is repeatedly reminded to look beyond rape crisis centers to see Black women’s antiviolence organizing. The author’s extensive use of writings by <strong>[End Page 658]</strong> Joan Little and other incarcerated Black women is particularly powerful for constructing the history of a group of women society is so determined to make disappear. Greene analyzes a dialectical relationship between local women like Little and others incarcerated at the North Carolina Correctional Center for Women and international superstars like Angela Davis and Assata Shakur. Careful documentation of Black women’s leadership in anticarceral politics—both as supporters of men’s prison uprisings and as instigators of their own women’s protests—challenges an Attica-centered, masculinist view of prison activism.</p> <p>Using multidisciplinary scholarship, Greene skillfully weaves together primary sources, including manuscript collections, oral histories, and movement images and texts, with several bodies of historical scholarship and Black feminist theory, deftly arguing, for example, that incarcerated Black women activists defied both the state and reformers by refusing the politics of respectability.</p> <p>The book’s nuanced portrayal of a multiracial women’s movement also documents how Black women leaders like Nkenge Touré, Loretta Ross, and Byllye Avery led or built their own multi-issue organizations, including the National Black Women’s Health Project, deploying strategic coalitions with white feminist organizations. 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Schultz </li> </ul> <em>Free Joan Little: The Politics of Race, Sexual Violence, and Imprisonment</em>. By Christina Greene. Justice, Power, and Politics. (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2022. Pp. xiv, 348. Paper, $32.95, ISBN 978-1-4696-7131-4; cloth, $99.00, ISBN 978-1-4696-7130-7.) <p>In 1976, the National Alliance of Black Feminists (NABF) drafted a Black Woman’s Bill of Rights. “The NABF’s logo,” as historian Christina Greene tells us in <em>Free Joan Little: The Politics of Race, Sexual Violence, and Imprisonment</em>, “was a pair of clenched fists in handcuffs, evoking both enslavement and imprisonment; one cuff was marked ‘sexism,’ the other labeled ‘racism’” (p. 83). This image distills many of the histories invoked and questions raised in this ambitious, groundbreaking work centered on Joan Little’s iconic 1974 sexual self-defense case against her jailer, a sixty-two-year-old white man, Clarence Alligood. The twenty-year-old African American woman fled her rural North Carolina jail cell, leaving Alligood naked from the waist down with multiple (and fatal) stab wounds. She escaped the death penalty through an international support campaign and a successful claim of self-defense against sexual assault, catalyzing important debates about such rights.</p> <p>Greene writes engagingly, using the Joan Little case to make incisive intersectional contributions in several historiographies. She states, for example, “By the 1970s, female activists on both sides of the prison walls drew on the women’s liberation, civil rights, and Black Power movements to fashion a politics that included incarcerated women” (p. 83). By making visible southern Black women’s prison and anti-rape organizing, she challenges the declension theory of the Black freedom movement after the late 1960s, writes Black women’s leadership into second-wave feminism—particularly the antiviolence movement—and honors Black women’s contributions to critiquing state violence as embodied by the growing prison industrial complex.</p> <p>The book is organized into three sections. The first demythologizes Joan Little (in the spirit of recent scholarship on Rosa Parks), illuminating how her case inspired alliances among many 1970s movements. The second sketches the foundations of a women’s tradition of prison organizing at the nexus of civil rights and Black Power. The third chronicles how a robust, multi-issue Black feminist movement led the way on organizing against sexual violence targeting women of color, part of a long tradition of Black women’s resistance to racialized and sexualized violence, including lynching. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 自由的琼-利特尔:Christina Greene Debra L. Schultz 著,《种族政治、性暴力和监禁》(Free Joan Little: The Politics of Race, Sexual Violence, and Imprisonment):种族政治、性暴力和监禁》。作者:克里斯蒂娜-格林。正义、权力与政治》。(教堂山:北卡罗来纳大学出版社,2022 年。第 xiv 页,第 348 页。纸质版,32.95 美元,ISBN 978-1-4696-7131-4;布质版,99.00 美元,ISBN 978-1-4696-7130-7)。1976 年,全国黑人女权主义者联盟(NABF)起草了《黑人妇女权利法案》。"正如历史学家克里斯蒂娜-格林(Christina Greene)在《自由琼-利特尔》(Free Joan Little:历史学家克里斯蒂娜-格林(Christina Greene)在《释放琼-利特尔:种族、性暴力和监禁的政治》一书中告诉我们,"NABF 的标志是一双紧握的拳头,带着手铐,让人联想到奴役和监禁;一只手铐上标有'性别歧视',另一只手铐上标有'种族主义'"(第 83 页)。这幅图片浓缩了这部雄心勃勃的开创性作品中援引的许多历史和提出的许多问题,该作品以琼-利特尔 1974 年对其狱卒--62 岁的白人克拉伦斯-阿利古德--的标志性性自卫案件为中心。这位 20 岁的非裔美国妇女逃离了她在北卡罗来纳州乡村监狱的牢房,导致阿利古德下半身赤裸,身上有多处(致命的)刀伤。她通过一场国际支持运动和对性侵犯的成功自卫主张,逃脱了死刑,引发了关于此类权利的重要辩论。格林的文章引人入胜,她利用琼-利特尔一案在多部史学著作中做出了精辟的交叉贡献。例如,她指出:"到 20 世纪 70 年代,监狱围墙两侧的女性活动家借鉴妇女解放、民权和黑人力量运动,形成了一种包括被监禁妇女在内的政治"(第 83 页)。通过展示南方黑人妇女的监狱和反强奸组织活动,她对 20 世纪 60 年代末之后黑人自由运动的衰落理论提出了质疑,将黑人妇女的领导力写入了第二波女权主义--尤其是反暴力运动--并表彰了黑人妇女在批判日益增长的监狱工业综合体所体现的国家暴力方面做出的贡献。本书分为三个部分。第一部分对琼-利特尔进行了解构(与最近关于罗莎-帕克斯的学术研究精神一致),阐明了她的案例如何激发了 20 世纪 70 年代众多运动之间的联盟。第二部分勾勒了在民权和黑人力量的纽带上,监狱妇女组织传统的基础。第三部分记录了一场声势浩大、涉及多个问题的黑人女权运动是如何领导组织反对针对有色人种妇女的性暴力的,这也是黑人妇女反抗种族化和性暴力行为(包括私刑)的悠久传统的一部分。关于 1994 年《犯罪法案》和《对妇女的暴力行为法案》的后记挑战读者对当今性别和监禁政治进行批判性思考。能见度和发言权的主题贯穿整个叙述。作者一再提醒读者,除了关注强奸危机中心,还要关注黑人妇女的反暴力组织活动。作者大量使用了琼-利特尔(Joan Little)和其他被监禁的黑人妇女的著作,这对于构建社会一心想让这群妇女消失的历史尤为有力。格林分析了像利特尔和其他被关押在北卡罗来纳州妇女教养中心的本地妇女与安吉拉-戴维斯和阿萨塔-夏库尔等国际巨星之间的辩证关系。该书仔细记录了黑人妇女在反监狱政治中的领导作用--她们既是男子监狱起义的支持者,也是自己的妇女抗议活动的煽动者--这对以阿提卡为中心的男性主义监狱活动观提出了挑战。格林运用多学科的研究方法,巧妙地将原始资料(包括手稿集、口述历史、运动图像和文本)与多项历史研究和黑人女权主义理论结合在一起,例如,她巧妙地论证了被监禁的黑人女活动家通过拒绝体面政治来反抗国家和改革者的观点。该书对多种族妇女运动进行了细致入微的描绘,还记录了恩肯格-图雷、洛雷塔-罗斯和拜尔利-艾弗里等黑人妇女领袖如何领导或建立自己的多问题组织,包括全国黑人妇女健康项目,并与白人女权组织建立战略联盟。民权领袖安妮-布莱登(Anne Braden)、女同性恋女权主义者马布-塞格雷斯特(Mab Segrest)和诗人明妮-布鲁斯-普拉特(Minnie Bruce Pratt)等白人女性勇敢地为琼...
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Free Joan Little: The Politics of Race, Sexual Violence, and Imprisonment by Christina Greene (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Free Joan Little: The Politics of Race, Sexual Violence, and Imprisonment by Christina Greene
  • Debra L. Schultz
Free Joan Little: The Politics of Race, Sexual Violence, and Imprisonment. By Christina Greene. Justice, Power, and Politics. (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2022. Pp. xiv, 348. Paper, $32.95, ISBN 978-1-4696-7131-4; cloth, $99.00, ISBN 978-1-4696-7130-7.)

In 1976, the National Alliance of Black Feminists (NABF) drafted a Black Woman’s Bill of Rights. “The NABF’s logo,” as historian Christina Greene tells us in Free Joan Little: The Politics of Race, Sexual Violence, and Imprisonment, “was a pair of clenched fists in handcuffs, evoking both enslavement and imprisonment; one cuff was marked ‘sexism,’ the other labeled ‘racism’” (p. 83). This image distills many of the histories invoked and questions raised in this ambitious, groundbreaking work centered on Joan Little’s iconic 1974 sexual self-defense case against her jailer, a sixty-two-year-old white man, Clarence Alligood. The twenty-year-old African American woman fled her rural North Carolina jail cell, leaving Alligood naked from the waist down with multiple (and fatal) stab wounds. She escaped the death penalty through an international support campaign and a successful claim of self-defense against sexual assault, catalyzing important debates about such rights.

Greene writes engagingly, using the Joan Little case to make incisive intersectional contributions in several historiographies. She states, for example, “By the 1970s, female activists on both sides of the prison walls drew on the women’s liberation, civil rights, and Black Power movements to fashion a politics that included incarcerated women” (p. 83). By making visible southern Black women’s prison and anti-rape organizing, she challenges the declension theory of the Black freedom movement after the late 1960s, writes Black women’s leadership into second-wave feminism—particularly the antiviolence movement—and honors Black women’s contributions to critiquing state violence as embodied by the growing prison industrial complex.

The book is organized into three sections. The first demythologizes Joan Little (in the spirit of recent scholarship on Rosa Parks), illuminating how her case inspired alliances among many 1970s movements. The second sketches the foundations of a women’s tradition of prison organizing at the nexus of civil rights and Black Power. The third chronicles how a robust, multi-issue Black feminist movement led the way on organizing against sexual violence targeting women of color, part of a long tradition of Black women’s resistance to racialized and sexualized violence, including lynching. An epilogue on the 1994 Crime Bill and the Violence Against Women Act challenges readers to think critically about gender and carceral politics today.

The themes of visibility and voice weave throughout the narrative. The reader is repeatedly reminded to look beyond rape crisis centers to see Black women’s antiviolence organizing. The author’s extensive use of writings by [End Page 658] Joan Little and other incarcerated Black women is particularly powerful for constructing the history of a group of women society is so determined to make disappear. Greene analyzes a dialectical relationship between local women like Little and others incarcerated at the North Carolina Correctional Center for Women and international superstars like Angela Davis and Assata Shakur. Careful documentation of Black women’s leadership in anticarceral politics—both as supporters of men’s prison uprisings and as instigators of their own women’s protests—challenges an Attica-centered, masculinist view of prison activism.

Using multidisciplinary scholarship, Greene skillfully weaves together primary sources, including manuscript collections, oral histories, and movement images and texts, with several bodies of historical scholarship and Black feminist theory, deftly arguing, for example, that incarcerated Black women activists defied both the state and reformers by refusing the politics of respectability.

The book’s nuanced portrayal of a multiracial women’s movement also documents how Black women leaders like Nkenge Touré, Loretta Ross, and Byllye Avery led or built their own multi-issue organizations, including the National Black Women’s Health Project, deploying strategic coalitions with white feminist organizations. White women like civil rights leader Anne Braden, lesbian feminist Mab Segrest, and poet Minnie Bruce Pratt took courageous stands for Joan...

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