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Wednesday, April 5, 2017

Daniel LaChance EVENT

THE LEGAL HISTORY WORKSHOP is delighted to welcome Daniel LaChance, Assistant Professor of History, Emory University, for a discussion of his new book Executing Freedom: The Cultural Life of Capital Punishment in the United States (Chicago 2016).
When:  Monday, April 113:30-5:00 pm
Where:  Mondale Hall (the Law School), Room 385, Lindquist & Vennum Conference Room
What: Discussion of Daniel LaChance, Executing Freedom: The Cultural Life of Capital Punishment in the United States (Chicago 2016)
There are copies of LaChance's book at the University bookstore for purchase.  You may also access the book in full through the Wilson Library online collection.  


Here is an abstract of the book.

Abstract:  In Executing Freedom, Daniel LaChance explores how the revival of the death penalty in the 1970s and its overwhelming popularity in the United States in the 1980s and 1990s was part of a larger story about freedom in the United States since World War II.  From conservatives who grew concerned that a paternalistic government was usurping the role of the family to civil libertarians worried that prisons were using a rehabilitative mission to dominate the minds of prisoners, Americans across the political spectrum grew wary of big government.  Reborn in a moment of anti-big government consensus, the death penalty reflected and reinforced a minimalist vision of government that many Americans, regardless of their feelings about capital punishment, had come to equate with freedom.  In analyzing the relationship between politics, legitimacy, and the death penalty, LaChance draws on primary sources from journalism, literature, film, and law.  The book surveys these sources across most of the twentieth century, integrating historical narratives, literary analysis, and political theory.  In the end, the book aims to reframe our understanding of modern punishment culture, revealing how harsh punishments like the death penalty create opportunities for individuals to transcend structural constraints, perversely becoming symbols of freedom.