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Historicizing Extramural Convict Labour: Trajectories and Transitions in Early Modern Europe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 July 2020

Johan Heinsen*
Affiliation:
Department of Politics and Society Faculty of Social Sciences, Aalborg University Fibigerstræde 1, 9220 Aalborg Ø, Denmark E-mail: heinsen@dps.aau.dk
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Abstract

New global histories of punishment are steadily decentring the history of punishment and convict labour, challenging traditional conceptions of a linear path towards a single penal modernity and the penitentiary as the telos of its history. Through an exploration of three strands of extramural convict labour emerging in Copenhagen (1558), Ulm (1561), and Almadén (1566), this interpretative essay argues that this challenge can be furthered by taking a view of Europe's own penal history from which the focus is less on origins and more on how the landscape of punishment evolved through a continuous and largely contingent process of assemblage. In this process, a few key elements – labour, displacement, pain, and confinement – were combined and mixed to different effects in specific contexts. Along with that approach comes the need to historicize the process by relating it to other practices of labour coercion, both within the penal field and outside it.

Information

Type
Suggestions and Debates
Copyright
Copyright © 2020 Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis
Figure 0

Figure 1. Pieces of irons and shackles as worn by convicts in Scandinavia. The band on the top was worn around the waist and connected by the chain to a smaller band below the knee.Nationalmuseet, Copenhagen, Denmark, with permission.