Punishment and Political Order

Punishment and Political Order

by Keally McBride
Punishment and Political Order
Punishment and Political Order

Punishment and Political Order

by Keally McBride

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Overview

Most of us think of punishment as an ugly display of power. But punishment also tells us something about the ideals and aspirations of a people and their government. How a state punishes reveals whether or not it is confident in its own legitimacy and sovereignty. Punishment and Political Order examines the questions raised by the state’s exercise of punitive power—from what it is about human psychology that desires sanction and order to how the state can administer pain while calling for justice. Keally McBride's book demonstrates punishment's place at the core of political administration and the stated ideals of the polity.

"From start to finish this is a terrific, engaging book. McBride offers a fascinating perspective on punishment, calling attention to its utility in understanding political regimes and their ideals. She succeeds in reminding us of the centrality of punishment in political theory and, at the same time, in providing a framework for understanding contemporary events. I know of no other book that does as much to make the subject of punishment so compelling."

—Austin Sarat, Amherst College

"Punishment and Political Order will be welcome reading for anyone interested in understanding law in society, punishment and political spectacle, or governing through crime control. This is a clear, accessible, and persuasive examination of punishment—as rhetoric and reality. Arguing that punishment is a complex product of the social contract, this book demonstrates the ways in which understanding the symbolic power and violence of the law provides analytical tools for examining the ideological function of prison labor today, as well as the crosscutting and contingent connections between language and identity, legitimation and violence, sovereignty and agency more generally."
—Bill Lyons, Director, Center for Conflict Management, University of Akron

"Philosophical explorations of punishment have often stopped with a theory of responsibility. McBride's book moves well beyond this. It shows that the problem of punishment is a central issue for any coherent theory of the state, and thus that punishment is at the heart of political theory. This is a stunning achievement."
—Malcolm M. Feeley, University of California at Berkeley

Keally McBride is Assistant Professor of Politics at the University of San Francisco.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780472901135
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Publication date: 02/28/2019
Series: Law, Meaning, And Violence
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 204
Sales rank: 945,184
File size: 768 KB

About the Author

Keally McBride is Assistant Professor of Politics at the University of San Francisco.

Table of Contents

\rrhp\ \lrrh: Contents\ \1h\ Contents \xt\ Acknowledgments Introduction: Strange Brew--Punishment and Political Ideals Chapter 1. The Whip of Utopia: On Punishment and Political Vision Chapter 2. "Man's Life Is but a Prison": Human Reason, Secular Political Order, and the Punishments of God Chapter 3. Earthly Divinity: Punishment and the Requirements of Sovereignty Chapter 4. Severing the Sanguinary Empire: Punishment and Early American Democratic Idealism Chapter 5. Punishment in Liberal Regimes Chapter 6. Hitched to the Post: Prison Labor, Choice, and Citizenship Chapter 7. Punishment and the Spiral of Disorder Notes References Index \to come\
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