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Of Greed and Glory

In Pursuit of Freedom for All

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A ground-breaking, personal exploration of America's obsession with continuing human bondage from the editor of the New York Times–bestselling Barracoon.

Freedom and equality are the watchwords of American democracy. But like justice, freedom and equality are meaningless when there is no corresponding practical application of the ideals they represent. Physical, bodily liberty is fundamental to every American's personal sovereignty. And yet, millions of Americans—including author Deborah Plant's brother, whose life sentence at Angola Prison reveals a shocking current parallel to her academic work on the history of slavery in America—are deprived of these basic freedoms every day.

In her studies of Zora Neale Hurston, Deborah Plant became fascinated by Hurston's explanation for the atrocities of the international slave trade. In her memoir, Dust Tracks on a Road, Hurston wrote: "But the inescapable fact that stuck in my craw, was: my people had sold me and the white people had bought me. . . . It impressed upon me the universal nature of greed and glory." We look the other way when the basic human rights of marginalized and stigmatized groups are violated and desecrated, not realizing that only the practice of justice everywhere secures justice, for any of us, anywhere.

An active vigilance is required of those who would be and remain free; with Of Greed and Glory, Deborah Plant reveals the many ways in which slavery continues in America today and charts our collective course toward personal sovereignty for all.

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    • Kirkus

      December 15, 2023
      A cogent study of how racialized abuse of justice is a feature--not a bug--of American life. "Several hundred thousand Americans are caged in American jails every single day, not because they are necessarily guilty of a crime but because our wealth-based justice system targets those who don't have the money to post bail....And the vast majority of those caged are poor, Black, and brown." So writes Plant, editor of Zora Neale Hurston's Barracoon, providing an example in her brother, who is now in Angola state prison in Louisiana, a state that, a legal scholar notes, "has some of the toughest sentencing laws in the country." It's no accident that those who cannot afford first-rate lawyers wind up in such places--or that some of these prisons sit on the sites of former slave plantations. Much of Plant's advocacy focuses on an amendment to remove the constitutional qualification that slavery and involuntarily servitude are forbidden except in the punishment of crime, meaning that Angola's prisoners, among others, are de facto enslaved. Again, this is no accident: The state's penal economy of agriculture and manufacture depends on a steady supply of people who are "duly convicted," often by "Black Codes" that excessively punish infractions such as vagrancy or being a public nuisance, most of which, like the presumption of the inherent criminality of Black citizens, are wholly subjective on the part of the justice system. Plant's argument is somewhat repetitive but always on point. Interestingly, she extends the realm of involuntary servitude to include women in the post-Dobbs era who "are now subject to the same kind of criminalization that re-enslaved and colonized Black citizens have suffered. 'The law' has been weaponized to bring women back under due subjection to their 'masters.'" A compelling argument against the systemic abuse of justice as a weapon of oppression.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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