FT-259642-18 | Research Programs: Summer Stipends | Martine Jean, PhD | Routine Imprisonment, Race, and Citizenship in 19th Century Brazil, 1830–1890 | 6/1/2018 - 7/31/2018 | $6,000.00 | Martine | | Jean | | | | University of South Carolina | Columbia | SC | 29208-0001 | USA | 2018 | Latin American History | Summer Stipends | Research Programs | 6000 | 0 | 6000 | 0 | A book length study on the development of prisons in Brazil between 1830
and 1890.
My monograph, "Routine Imprisonment, Race, and Citizenship in Nineteenth-Century Brazil, 1830-1890," investigates the birth of the prison in Brazil with a focus on Rio de Janeiro’s Casa de Correção, the city’s penitentiary, and the Casa de Detenção, a remand prison, from 1830 to 1890. This era spans the post-independence period, the termination of the slave trade in 1850, and the protracted emancipation process that culminated in the abolition of slavery in 1888 and the fall of the Empire (1822-1889). The research highlights the seeming paradox that Brazil’s construction of the Casa de Correção represents in the global history of the penitentiary which is associated with industrializing societies and free wage labor whereas slavery was the basis of the Brazilian economy until 1888. |