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Vagrant Figures: Law, Literature, and the Origins of the Police

Part of the The Lewis Walpole series in eighteenth-century culture and history series
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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.

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£50.00
Product Details
Yale University Press
0300255705 / 9780300255706
eBook (Adobe Pdf, EPUB)
05/01/2021
English
288 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%