Vagrant Figures

WARNING

You are viewing an older version of the Yalebooks website. Please visit out new website with more updated information and a better user experience: https://www.yalebooks.com

Law, Literature, and the Origins of the Police

Sal Nicolazzo

View Inside Format: Hardcover
Price: $65.00
YUP
Our shopping cart only supports Mozilla Firefox. Please ensure you're using that browser before attempting to purchase.

How vagrancy, as legal and imaginative category, shaped the role of policing in colonialism, racial formation, and resource distribution
 
In this innovative book demonstrating the important role of eighteenth-century literary treatments of policing and vagrancy, Nicolazzo offers a prehistory of police legitimacy in a period that predates the establishment of the modern police force. She argues that narrative, textual, and rhetorical practices shaped not only police and legal activity of the period, but also public conceptions of police power. Her extensive research delves into law and literature on both sides of the Atlantic, tracking the centrality of vagrancy in establishing police power as a form of sovereignty crucial to settler colonialism, slavery, and racial capitalism. The first book in several generations to address policing and vagrancy in the eighteenth century, and the first in the field to center race and empire in its account of literary vagrancy, Nicolazzo’s work is a significant contribution to the field of eighteenth-century literary and cultural studies.

Sal Nicolazzo is assistant professor of Literature at the University of California, San Diego.

“A superb book. Its historical depth and geographical breadth accomplishes far more than most literary scholars, writing on this topic, have done in recent years.”—Betty Joseph, Rice University

“A cultural criticism built on the close reading of texts, a model of careful and conscientious reading, and a vital contribution to our understanding of literature’s ideological work.”—Eugenia Zuroski, McMaster University

“Nicolazzo finds the roots of modern policing in the earliest days of the American colonies and traces compelling connections between the local minutiae of vagrancy law and the vast, brutal sweep of British imperial expansion.”—Charlotte Sussman, Duke University

"Reading lyric poetry, fiction, and memoir together with statutory law and the bureaucratic ephemera of various legal functionaries, Sal Nicolazzo dramatically expands our understanding of policing and of the practices and narratives that accompanied it in the early modern period."—Simon Stern, University of Toronto
ISBN: 9780300241310
Publication Date: January 5, 2021
320 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
3 b/w illus.
The Lewis Walpole Series in Eighteenth-Century Culture and History
On Empire, Liberty, and Reform

Speeches and Letters

Edmund Burke; Edited by David Bromwich

View details
1688

The First Modern Revolution

Steve Pincus

View details
Atlas of the Transatlantic Slave Trade

David Eltis and David Richardson; Foreword by David Brion D

...
View details
Civil Society and Empire

Ireland and Scotland in the Eighteenth-Century Atlantic World

James Livesey

View details
Enlightened Pleasures

Eighteenth-Century France and the New Epicureanism

Thomas M. Kavanagh

View details