Everyday Crimes: Social Violence and Civil Rights in Early America

Author:   Kelly A. Ryan
Publisher:   New York University Press
ISBN:  

9781479869619


Pages:   400
Publication Date:   06 August 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Everyday Crimes: Social Violence and Civil Rights in Early America


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Author:   Kelly A. Ryan
Publisher:   New York University Press
Imprint:   New York University Press
Weight:   0.635kg
ISBN:  

9781479869619


ISBN 10:   1479869619
Pages:   400
Publication Date:   06 August 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Everyday Crimes is a must-read for any undergraduate or graduate course on US history, especially with a focus on race or gender.


Everyday Crimes is a must-read for any undergraduate or graduate course on US history, especially with a focus on race or gender. -- H-Net Reviews Everyday Crimes challenges our assumptions about the origins of American civil rights and humanitarian movements, arguing that the nascent foundation of these resistance efforts began long before the mid-nineteenth century. . . . One of the most appealing and impressive facets of Ryan's work is its methodological approach, namely her intersectional framework of analysis. Situating her study around the concepts of human and civil rights likewise raises the stakes of her contentions about the effects resistance had on influencing changes to the law and the social order. Ryan's important work draws much needed attention to the ways in which these early forms of resistance to violence implemented and organized by society's most vulnerable members shaped both the law and early Americans' views of who the law ought to protect. * New England Quarterly * Kelly Ryan's Everyday Crimes provides perhaps the most in-depth study to date of violence against legally-dependent people in early America. . . . Ryan has produced an important work that both breaks new conceptual ground and provides valuable narrative evidence on the everyday lives of the downtrodden and ignored in early New York and Massachusetts. By combining detailed narrative with ambitious argument and careful attention to change over time, Everyday Crimes is an essential read for students of social history of the colonial and early national period as well as legal scholars and those interested in disenfranchised groups in early American history. * Civil War Book Review *


Everyday Crimes is a must-read for any undergraduate or graduate course on US history, especially with a focus on race or gender. * H-Net Reviews * Ryan's ability to connect the societal norms, English common law, and history is done in a way that engages the reader and provides a perspective on history that is often overlooked. This book is highly recommended for a diverse audience to include history enthusiasts, sociologists that study class relationships, sociologists that focus on civil rights for women, and early America criminologists. This book can be utilized as a supplemental textbook for a graduate class that would focus on society's relationship with social norms and the early formation of the criminal justice system. * Criminal Justice Review * Everyday Crimes is an ambitious and provocative contribution to the histories of violence, law, and gender in early America. Ryan shows how individual lives were plotted along multiple axes of dependence, leaving legally dependent men, women, and children vulnerable to physical violence, judicial inaction, and public indifference. They resisted when and how they could, slowly redefining their place in the social economy of violence [...] Everyday Crimes is a rich and interesting work, and one that is sure to inspire future studies. * Journal of the Early Republic * Everyday Crimes challenges our assumptions about the origins of American civil rights and humanitarian movements, arguing that the nascent foundation of these resistance efforts began long before the mid-nineteenth century. . . . One of the most appealing and impressive facets of Ryan's work is its methodological approach, namely her intersectional framework of analysis. Situating her study around the concepts of human and civil rights likewise raises the stakes of her contentions about the effects resistance had on influencing changes to the law and the social order. Ryan's important work draws much needed attention to the ways in which these early forms of resistance to violence implemented and organized by society's most vulnerable members shaped both the law and early Americans' views of who the law ought to protect. * New England Quarterly * Kelly Ryan's Everyday Crimes provides perhaps the most in-depth study to date of violence against legally-dependent people in early America. . . . Ryan has produced an important work that both breaks new conceptual ground and provides valuable narrative evidence on the everyday lives of the downtrodden and ignored in early New York and Massachusetts. By combining detailed narrative with ambitious argument and careful attention to change over time, Everyday Crimes is an essential read for students of social history of the colonial and early national period as well as legal scholars and those interested in disenfranchised groups in early American history. * Civil War Book Review *


Author Information

Kelly A. Ryan is Dean of the School of Social Sciences and Professor of History at Indiana University Southeast. She is the author of Everyday Crimes: Social Violence and Civil Rights in Early America (NYU Press 2019) and Regulating Passion: Sexuality and Patriarchal Rule in Massachusetts, 1700–1830 (Oxford University Press, 2014).

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