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  1. Chapter 5, “The New Jim Crow,” examines how structural racism allows and enables the “The New Jim Crow” to exist openly in American society. Chapter 6, “The Fire This Time” discusses how the status quo hinders the elimination of mass incarceration and how the system can be dismantled without laying the ground for a replacement.

  2. Overview. In The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness, civil rights lawyer and scholar Michelle Alexander explores the racist origins of America’s system of mass incarceration. Published in 2010, the book has spent over 250 weeks on The New York Times bestseller list. It was named one of the 100 Best Books of the 21st ...

  3. Summary: Introduction. Under slavery and under Jim Crow in the United States, African Americans were either explicitly blocked from voting, or had obstacles placed before them, such as “poll taxes” or “literacy tests.”. The “New Jim Crow” does much the same thing by utilizing the criminal justice system. Believing that justice is ...

  4. The New Jim Crow Summary. The book begins with a Foreword by Cornel West, who argues that it will prove indispensable to the fight against racial justice in the contemporary moment and that it embodies “the spirit of Martin Luther King, Jr. ” West critiques the political climate that has flourished under President Barack Obama, arguing that ...

  5. Analysis. Alexander introduces a person called Jarvius Cotton, who—like generations of his family before him—cannot vote. Each generation was prevented from voting for a different reason; first slavery, then the Ku Klux Klan, then poll taxes and literacy tests, then, in Jarvius’ case, because he “has been labeled a felon” and is on ...

  6. Key Facts about The New Jim Crow. Full Title: The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness. When Written: 2005-2010. When Published: 2010. Literary Period: Contemporary nonfiction, 21st century African American criticism. Genre: Sociopolitical nonfiction. Setting: United States, focusing mostly on 1980-present.

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  8. The New Jim Crow had arrived. Analysis. The New Jim Crow was an undeniable phenomenon when it came out. It landed on bestseller lists, was discussed in the media endlessly, made Alexander an activist-scholar hero, and led to many subsequent handbooks and publications on how to bring its prescriptions for a better criminal justice system to ...

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