Praise for American Purgatory:
"American Purgatoryseeks to unite the history of the prison, the history of slavery, and the history of American empire, arguing that they are bound together by carceral violence and by the resistance to it. The climb out of the American purgatory is at least as steep as Dantes mountain, with no guarantee of reaching Paradise. But we have Webers book, a more comprehensive map than any yet made, with paths upward marked out by those whose knowledge was earned by hard experience."
Los Angeles Review of Books
"American Purgatoryis the sort of book reactionary politicians and organizations are trying to ban. Its full of evidence that many of the attitudes and conditions prevalent in this country from its founding were racist, bigoted, even genocidal."
The Arts Fuse
"Historian Weber connects the histories of mass incarceration and American imperialism in his wide-ranging and innovative debut. . . . Its an eye-opening and fresh perspective on a pair of hot-button issues."
Publishers Weekly(starred review)
"A timely consideration of the geopolitical role of American prisons."
Kirkus Reviews
"For years now, I have turned to Benjamin Webers work to more fully make sense of American history. He is a historian who has transformed my understanding of the relationship between racism, imperialism, and incarceration. He is a scholar who writes with both moral urgency and intellectual clarity. American Purgatory will forever change how we understand the rise of mass incarceration. It will forever change how we understand this country.
Clint Smith, bestselling author of How the Word Is Passed
"American Purgatoryis a tour de force that brings together the history of racial exploitation and colonialism over four centuries, as well as the various forms of opposition that consistently emerged in response to punitive developments. In doing so, Benjamin Weber provides a critical new framework that can help us envision a more equitable and just world."
Elizabeth Hinton, author ofFrom the War on Poverty to the War on Crime
Masterfully researched and written, American Purgatory takes the history of mass incarceration to an entirely new level, as it connects centuries of American expansion and conquest on the North American continent and overseas to the planning logics and actual practices of prison systems. Benjamin Webers global perspective on prison imperialism as well as prisoners resistance has produced a field-defining book.
Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, Harvard University
This outstanding book exposes the surprising connection between Americas current age of mass incarceration and the imperial prisons of the past. Showing how racism and colonialism shaped government efforts to incapacitate people who resisted the incursions of U.S. foreign policy, Weber highlights the urgency of understanding the relation between decolonization, antiracism, and the possibility of prison abolition.
Vincent Brown, author of Tackys Revolt
"American Purgatory shows how racialized criminalization and incarceration have been the key mechanisms of state building at home and imperialism abroad."
George Lipsitz, author of The Possessive Investment in Whiteness
"A must-read, American Purgatory makes clear that truly understanding the depth of todays carceral crisis means recognizing it as a global apparatusone that has always informed how this nation maintains white supremacy as well as manages acts of resistance and self-determination not simply within its own borders, but around the world."
Heather Ann Thompson, Pulitzer Prizewinning author of Blood in the Water
"A detailed and passionate account of the practice and responses to U.S. prison imperialism in the past that serves as an intellectual grounding for those engaged in the unfinished work of decolonization."
V.P. Franklin, Distinguished Professor Emeritus of History and Education, University of California, Riverside
"An international history of the U.S. prison problem, guided by the voices of those who never let captivity break their global freedom dreams."
Dan Berger, author of Stayed on Freedom
"An important contribution to strengthening our prison abolition and anti-colonial movements and our refusal to be defined by criminalization."
Pam Fadem, California Coalition for Women Prisoners