{"id":64938,"date":"2026-03-10T10:00:00","date_gmt":"2026-03-10T15:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/?p=64938"},"modified":"2026-03-09T14:18:43","modified_gmt":"2026-03-09T19:18:43","slug":"there-are-more-prisons-in-heaven-earth","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/there-are-more-prisons-in-heaven-earth\/","title":{"rendered":"There Are More Prisons in Heaven &amp; Earth\u2026"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>Venturing deep into a cavern, a potter discovers six human cadavers, lashed in place so as to face the wall of the cave, and the traces of a fire behind them. \u201cDo you know what that is,\u201d the potter, Cipriano, asks his son-in-law, in the last pages of Jos\u00e9 Saramago\u2019s novel <em>The Cave<\/em>. \u201cYes, I remember reading something about it once, replied Mar\u00e7al, And do you know that, since that\u2019s what it is, what we saw there has no reality, cannot be real.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>And yet I touched the forehead of one of those women with my own hand, it wasn\u2019t an illusion, it wasn\u2019t a dream, if I went back there now, I would find the same three men and the same three women, the same cords binding them, the same stone bench, the same wall in front of them, If they can\u2019t be those other people, since they never existed, who are they, asked Mar\u00e7al, I don\u2019t know, but after seeing them, I started thinking that perhaps what really doesn\u2019t exist is what we call nonexistence.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>This most celebrated of philosophical fictions is not real, for it describes no place anywhere upon (or beneath) the earth. And yet, it is realer than real: for it describes every place, every time, every thing. It describes our encounter with reality itself.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The existence of the nonexistent is rather important to Jacob Abolafia\u2019s <em>The Prison before the Panopticon<\/em>. This incisive, unsettling study is a history of nonexistent prisons, the sort of prisons that\u2014like Saramago\u2019s cavern, like Plato\u2019s cave\u2014existed only in the fictions of philosophers. \u201cThe idea precedes the institution,\u201d argues Abolafia, meaning that actual prisons did not become a fixture of the political order until the arrival of modernity (to wit, the late 18th century). But the <em>idea<\/em> of a prison featured in the ruminations of political philosophers long before that, and it is these theoretical prisons with which Abolafia is concerned. \u201cThe prison is both thoroughly modern,\u201d he contends, \u201cand deeply rooted in European political thought.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Before turning to the philosophy, it is worth saying something about the history. Like Saramago\u2019s Cipriano, faced with six corpses and a cave, we must square Abolafia\u2019s claim with all we know of premodern prisons: from the dungeons beneath every self-respecting castle to the writings of a Boethius or a Marco Polo. To address these facts, <em>The Prison before the Panopticon<\/em> narrows its definition of \u201cthe prison.\u201d If \u201cprison\u201d means incarceration of any kind and for any purpose, the prison is as old as cities and laws and walls. If, however, the word means <em>incarceration<\/em> <em>specifically as a punishment<\/em>, then Abolafia maintains prisons did not really exist prior to modernity. The distinction may reflect the nuances of theory rather than the untidy violence of practice, but then Abolafia is concerned with \u201cthe conceptual construction rather than the material reality of incarceration,\u201d with the prison \u201cas a discursive site rather than an archaeological site.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As history, I am afraid, Abolafia\u2019s claim is not really tenable. Prisons were ubiquitous and significant presences in ancient, medieval, and early modern history, routinely used for the purpose of punishment. But as political theory, <em>The Prison before the Panopticon<\/em> has much to say on its own terms. Abolafia has crafted a series of sensitive, original readings of philosophers ancient and modern, together forming a vivid intellectual genealogy of the prison. Even that gap between political theory and history contributes to the book doing the very best thing a book can do, which is to provoke thought\u2014about what the prison is and does, about its place in society, and about the ways we try to make sense of our own violence.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<hr class=\"wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity\"\/>\n\n\n\n<p>Abolafia breaks down the political theory of the prison into two different lines of argument. The first, which he finds in Demosthenes and Thomas Hobbes, is what he calls the paradox of popular authorization: the prison is the only punishment that affects both rich and poor, high and low, while keeping the offender within the body politic. Accordingly, it is peculiarly suited to maintaining a homeostasis within that body. The \u201cparadox,\u201d according to Abolafia, is that a punishment meant to uphold equality does so by making citizens unequal\u2014perhaps to the point of no longer being citizens. The second tradition, more familiar to our time, is that prison is a tool to reform individuals into better subjects\/citizens, an idea <em>The Prison before the Panopticon<\/em> follows from Plato to Thomas More to Jeremy Bentham.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Abolafia begins in Athens, where two of Demosthenes\u2019s courtroom speeches articulate a \u201cdemocratic theory of the prison as a form of egalitarian punishment,\u201d to curb elites whose excessive wealth and power might jeopardize the democratic nature of the state. The prison emerges as a crux for Athenian anxieties about their democracy and its limitations (and the uncomfortable reality that its equality depended upon systemic inequalities\u2014most of all the slavery which the prison so resembled). Such a paradox can be found in Hobbes, too, even though he had no truck with democracy. Still, he had to confront analogous tensions in how the prison interacted with the conceptual foundations of his politics. Punishment writ large is a problem for Hobbes, insofar as there are certain rights that not even the Leviathan can take from the subject, including that of self-defense. Whence, then, the authority to punish? In a fascinating, beautifully textured reading, Abolafia follows Hobbes as he grapples with the paradox: in which the prison took on an outsize prominence due to \u201cthe central importance of physical restraint in Hobbes\u2019s theory of liberty and, ultimately, to his theory of the social contract.\u201d Hobbes positions incarceration as \u201ca sort of liminal condition between full citizenship and the state of war.\u201d The captive reenacts the primal moment of the social contract and yields their rights to the sovereign anew.<\/p>\n\n\n\n    <div class=\"wp-block-group pattern related-reading has-global-padding is-layout-constrained wp-block-group-is-layout-constrained items-1\">\n\n                      <div class=\"block-heading\">\n            Related readings          <\/div>\n      \n      \n          <div class=\"wp-block-columns wp-block-post gap-tight is-layout-flex wp-block-columns-is-layout-flex\">\n\n              <div class=\"wp-block-column is-layout-flow wp-block-column-is-layout-flow\" style=\"flex-basis: 50%;\">\n                  <figure class=\"wp-block-post-featured-image\">\n                    <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/what-makes-a-prison\/\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"1000\" height=\"600\" src=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/11\/lossy-page1-1280px-thumbnail.tif-1000x600.jpg\" class=\"attachment-feature_img_crop size-feature_img_crop wp-post-image\" alt=\"\" \/><\/a>                  <\/figure>\n              <\/div>\n\n              <div class=\"wp-block-column is-layout-flow wp-block-column-is-layout-flow\" style=\"flex-basis: 50%;\">\n\n                  <div class=\"taxonomy-category wp-block-post-terms\">\n                      <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/category\/reviews\/\" rel=\"tag\">Reviews<\/a>\n                  <\/div>\n\n                  <h5 class=\"h6 wp-block-post-title\">\n                      <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/what-makes-a-prison\/\" target=\"_self\">What Makes a Prison?<\/a>\n                  <\/h5>\n\n                      <div class=\"pb-author-block\">\n                  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/author\/dan-berger-2\/\" class=\"pb-author-img-link\">\n            <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"300\" height=\"300\" src=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/08\/Berger-headshot-by-Marc-Studer-2022-scaled-e1698269289369-300x300.jpg\" class=\"pb-author-avatar wp-post-image\" alt=\"\" \/>          <\/a>\n                <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/author\/dan-berger-2\/\" class=\"pb-author-name\">\n          Dan Berger        <\/a>\n      <\/div>\n    \n              <\/div>\n          <\/div>\n\n      \n    <\/div>\n\n\n\n\n<p>Plato, Demosthenes\u2019s older contemporary, launches Abolafia\u2019s other genealogy, the prison as the means of reform. The argument requires considerable philosophical legwork: accounts of \u201chow the human mind works, how physical confinement affects psychic function, and how confining criminals will make them better citizens,\u201d as well as the proper prison for the job. In broadest strokes, where Demosthenes and Hobbes are interested in <em>who<\/em> punishes and <em>who<\/em> is punished, Plato and his heirs are more concerned with the <em>how<\/em> of incarceration.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>With respect to Plato, the key text is the philosopher\u2019s last dialogue, the <em>Laws<\/em>. In legislating for the ideal state, the characters propose no fewer than three prisons: a jail for the quotidian maintenance of order, a reformatory, and a remote facility to be given \u201ca name suggestive of punishment.\u201d The latter two institutions are reserved for the punishment of \u201cimpiety,\u201d with prisoners placed according to redeemability. Abolafia deftly maps Plato\u2019s carceral theories onto his epistemology, showing how the prisons reflect an intricate taxonomy of passion, pleasure, knowledge, and ignorance by which crimes and criminals may be distinguished. No less effective is the demonstration of the political stakes of the prisons\u2014why should a polity exert itself to make people better? The prisons are an education in shame, to further \u201cthe emotion\u2019s natural role as a mediator of intersubjective ethical life.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Plato gives way to Thomas More, whose <em>Utopia<\/em> shares the ambition to transform through punishment. Yet this work also draws deeply from the Christian monastic tradition, which in the intervening centuries had evolved its own ways of transmuting confinement into reform. For More, what makes imprisonment reforming is <em>labor<\/em>; because it \u201cdoes what no other form of punishment can\u2014it corrects behavior both justly and usefully.\u201d Ironically, then, <em>Utopia<\/em> transposes reform from the moral realm to the practical, not to say the utilitarian.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-pullquote\"><blockquote><p>The prison we know today does not really promise reform (and would not be believed if it did) and works to fragment any sense of political community.<\/p><\/blockquote><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p>Enter Jeremy Bentham, brandishing the plans of his Panopticon. Bentham owed much more to the Utopian tradition than we imagine, and like Plato he rooted his reforming prison in sweeping accounts of human psychology (all behavior reduces to the seeking of pleasure and the avoiding of pain) and of social order (best secured by labor and property).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The result is a fresh perspective on what is genuinely new in the Panopticon: its atomized individualism. The utilitarian calculus anchored reform entirely in how the subject themselves judged their own interests (as adjusted by the prison). This solitary consumer\/producer\/prisoner comes into sharper focus against the background of Plato\u2019s and More\u2019s profoundly interpersonal definitions of reform. For Abolafia, then, the Panopticon is best understood as the end-point of a tradition rather than its beginning.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<hr class=\"wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity\"\/>\n\n\n\n<p>If the modern theory of the prison is the confluence of these two philosophical traditions, the wellsprings appear to have run dry. The prison we know today does not really promise reform (and would not be believed if it did) and works to fragment any sense of political community. Abolafia conjectures that prison abolition has such potency as an idea in the realm of the scholar and the activist precisely because the ideological foundations of the prison have rotted away. \u201cNeither of the intellectual resources on which the modern theory of the prison initially relied\u2014the idea of reform and the value of incarceration for popular self-rule\u2014can be plausibly endorsed in the United States in the age of mass incarceration.\u201d Reform through punishment seems to be well and truly dead. Not only because every technique yet developed to reform prisoners has failed, Abolafia explains, but also because any <em>successful<\/em> method would prove incompatible with contemporary norms around autonomy, equality, and liberty.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But perhaps there\u2019s life in the popular authorization tradition yet. Abolafia concludes with the possibility of a prison for \u201cthe preservation of political principles like equal voice, equal respect, and people power,\u201d through the punishment of the violent and the anti-democratic. A realigning of carceral priorities from drug dealers and petty thieves to insider traders and would-be tyrants. The book\u2019s last line\u2014a provocation both exasperating and stimulating\u2014invites the reader \u201cto imagine a future of thinking about incarceration that rises to the moral challenges set by the past.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The instinctual reaction of a prison abolitionist such as myself is to recoil. A democracy that relies upon the prison is not the democracy we ought to want. Engaging more seriously, I see a loophole of some breadth: to take a single example, if you asked the late Alexei Navalny\u2019s jailers, they would tell you that he was imprisoned for massive corruption and for anti-democratic political activity. As a matter of history, the road to American mass incarceration was paved with democratic intentions, from the 18th-century penitentiaries that promised a suitably republican form of punishment to the shibboleth of citizenship that justifies the detention of undocumented immigrants.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Even supposing we sought a democratic prison, could we get there from here? Abolafia acknowledges that contemporary mass incarceration is \u201cantithetical\u201d to those democratic values. The implication is that that antithesis is incidental, rather than inherent (or so ingrained as to become inherent). Out of the crooked timber of mass incarceration, how are we to make something straight?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<hr class=\"wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity\"\/>\n\n\n\n<p>So we return to the relationship of history to political philosophy, the existent to the nonexistent.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The gap between theory and practice structures <em>The Prison before the Panopticon<\/em>. A refrain of the book is the distance between a given philosopher\u2019s visions and the realities of the prisons of their time. A prisoner in Athens, whatever Demosthenes said, was far more likely to be a pauper than an oligarch. Their prison was not part of a sweeping political vision and it did not try to reform them, whatever Plato dreamed up. Renaissance slavery was not an enlightening experience, whatever tales More told.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Indeed, I find myself asking whether any of these philosophers knew what they were talking about. At a certain point, the distance between the discursive site and the archaeological site strains the limits of analogy. That is not to say that Plato\u2019s hypothetical prisons are unimportant merely because they were hypothetical: as Abolafia shows, the influence of his ideas is still being felt, and nothing comparable can be said for the actual prisons of classical Athens.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But what sort of philosophy of the prison can be made from unreal prisons? Put another way: Must there be some descriptive, as well as normative, element to political philosophy?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Here I think of another insightful reader of More\u2019s <em>Utopia<\/em>, the German historian Hermann Oncken. Though somewhat beclouded by anachronism and post-Versailles resentments, Oncken\u2019s 1922 lecture, <em>Die Utopia des Thomas Morus und das Machtproblem in der Staatslehre<\/em> (<em>Thomas More\u2019s <\/em>Utopia<em> and the problem of power in political theory<\/em>) shed much light on the violence inherent to Utopia and on the nature of political thought.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>He argues that every abstract theory of the state runs aground on power, because the exercise of power is bound up with the specifics of time and place\u2014contingencies that cannot be theorized, but learned empirically or historically. The moment a theoretical state must <em>do<\/em> something, theory gives way to history: what institutions are in place, who are its neighbors, and so on. Oncken critiques the search for \u201cthe state as such\u201d and the analysis thereof \u201cas an isolated phenomenon, roughly in the same way and with the same justifications as science first of all isolates the object of its inquiries, an organ or a plant, in order to subject it to their investigation.\u201d The state that could be thus analyzed never existed and never could.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The same is true, mutatis mutandis, of the prison. Abolafia compellingly demonstrates that a theory of punishment must be rooted in broader philosophical accounts. A Demosthenes or a Hobbes needs a theory of the state\u2014an account of the political homeostasis that the prison helps to maintain. A Plato or a More or a Bentham needs an account of moral psychology such that the prison can make people better. Both are in some measure empirical questions: Is the state really \u201clike that\u201d? Are prisoners\u2019 minds really \u201clike that\u201d?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>To answer such questions with the hypothetical prisoner is the philosopher\u2019s version of playing tennis without the net, to borrow a phrase from Robert Frost. It is simply too easy. Imaginary prisoners do not have the real prisoner\u2019s unpleasant habit of surprising. The allegorical inmate only ever rebels in anticipated ways. These nonexistent prisons have the privilege of the unfalsifiable, but also the fragility of the untested.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On one level, I am suggesting that the unreality of these philosophies calls their soundness and validity into question. But on another, I wonder whether the real antithesis is between the prison and philosophy. One 19th-century Irish writer, describing the regime at Armagh Jail, listed the rewards on offer to the prisoner \u201cif he takes to it philosophically.\u201d Submission is all the philosophy the prison expects of its inmates.<sup data-fn=\"bc170a1d-a915-40ca-9aff-39e89389373f\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#bc170a1d-a915-40ca-9aff-39e89389373f\" id=\"bc170a1d-a915-40ca-9aff-39e89389373f-link\">1<\/a><\/sup> The extreme case might be the words of the Auschwitz guard when Primo Levi asked why he could not slake his thirst from an icicle: <em>Hier ist kein warum<\/em>. There is no why here.<sup data-fn=\"52666e3a-7fdf-4c4b-83e8-272694b9e69a\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#52666e3a-7fdf-4c4b-83e8-272694b9e69a\" id=\"52666e3a-7fdf-4c4b-83e8-272694b9e69a-link\">2<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n\n\n\n    <div class=\"wp-block-group pattern related-reading has-global-padding is-layout-constrained wp-block-group-is-layout-constrained items-1\">\n\n                      <div class=\"block-heading\">\n            Related readings          <\/div>\n      \n      \n          <div class=\"wp-block-columns wp-block-post gap-tight is-layout-flex wp-block-columns-is-layout-flex\">\n\n              <div class=\"wp-block-column is-layout-flow wp-block-column-is-layout-flow\" style=\"flex-basis: 50%;\">\n                  <figure class=\"wp-block-post-featured-image\">\n                    <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/a-prison-the-size-of-the-state-a-police-to-control-the-world\/\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"640\" height=\"475\" src=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/12\/Line_of_men_drilling_3607561825-1.jpg\" class=\"attachment-feature_img_crop size-feature_img_crop wp-post-image\" alt=\"\" \/><\/a>                  <\/figure>\n              <\/div>\n\n              <div class=\"wp-block-column is-layout-flow wp-block-column-is-layout-flow\" style=\"flex-basis: 50%;\">\n\n                  <div class=\"taxonomy-category wp-block-post-terms\">\n                      <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/category\/reviews\/\" rel=\"tag\">Reviews<\/a>\n                  <\/div>\n\n                  <h5 class=\"h6 wp-block-post-title\">\n                      <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/a-prison-the-size-of-the-state-a-police-to-control-the-world\/\" target=\"_self\">A Prison the Size of the State, A Police to Control the World<\/a>\n                  <\/h5>\n\n                      <div class=\"pb-author-block\">\n                  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/author\/marisol-lebron\/\" class=\"pb-author-img-link\">\n            <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"300\" height=\"300\" src=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/12\/Marisol-Lebron-Photo-300x300.jpeg\" class=\"pb-author-avatar wp-post-image\" alt=\"\" \/>          <\/a>\n                <a href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/author\/marisol-lebron\/\" class=\"pb-author-name\">\n          Marisol LeBr\u00f3n        <\/a>\n      <\/div>\n    \n              <\/div>\n          <\/div>\n\n      \n    <\/div>\n\n\n\n\n<p>It is the violence of the prison, violence on an unthinkable scale, that makes this book so timely. The prison is, without any question, one of the preeminent problems for political philosophy in the 21st century, as thinkers like Mariame Kaba and Tommie Shelby have already recognized. And as Abolafia shows us, this has long been the case.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But in such a context, a political philosophy of the prison with no necessary relationship to the realities of the prison is a luxury we can ill afford. Because the prisons, the actual prisons, are where contemporary politics happen. The prison and its outriders\u2014policing, probation, parole, bail, surveillance\u2014have become many citizens\u2019 most immediate and most meaningful encounters with the state. Entire realms of the political, such as migration, are framed in carceral terms. The prison poses an anomaly for representative democracy, its inmates usually deprived of the right to vote but counted for purposes of gerrymandering. Contemporary political economy must account for states contracting out the punishment function to private companies and the vast economic ecosystem, of caterers and internet service providers and architects, sustained by the public money poured into prisons. Even the international dimension of political philosophy has its carceral edge, in hostage taking, prisoner swaps, and solemn agreements for one country to lock up another\u2019s inmates. The fact that one in every three American adults has a criminal record demands a whole new account of citizenship and its relationship to punishment.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It also demands recognizing prisons as spaces where political philosophy might happen. The prisoner has no choice but to be a political philosopher: they are daily confronted with the realities and ideologies of the political order, and they have time and every incentive to understand them. We all know a litany of famous political prisoners and dissidents, but I am really talking about the unsung philosophers who populate tiers and yards across the world. Like the incarcerated scholar in <a href=\"https:\/\/web.archive.org\/web\/20230324083940\/https:\/www.newappsblog.com\/2013\/01\/reading-plato-on-death-row.html\">Lisa Guenther\u2019s Plato reading group<\/a>, who drew upon the <em>Phaedo<\/em>, the dialogue depicting the final hours before Socrates\u2019s execution, to craft a luminous critique of capital punishment: \u201cThey\u2019ve stolen death.&nbsp;A perfectly natural thing has been taken and used as a tool \u2026&nbsp;No one has the right to do that, to take death and use it for their own purposes.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>If political philosophy is really to confront the problem of the prison, the symposium should be taking place inside the prison itself.<\/p>\n\n\n<ol class=\"wp-block-footnotes\"><li id=\"bc170a1d-a915-40ca-9aff-39e89389373f\">Quoted in Chris Ryder, <em>Inside the Maze: The Untold Story of the Northern Ireland Prison Service<\/em> (Methuen, 2001), 14. <a href=\"#bc170a1d-a915-40ca-9aff-39e89389373f-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 1\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"52666e3a-7fdf-4c4b-83e8-272694b9e69a\">Primo Levi, <em>Survival in Auschwitz<\/em>, trans. Stuart Woolf (Touchstone, 1996), 29. <a href=\"#52666e3a-7fdf-4c4b-83e8-272694b9e69a-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 2\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><\/ol>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>&#8220;A political philosophy of the prison with no necessary relationship to the realities of the prison is a luxury we can ill afford.&#8221;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":34,"featured_media":64959,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":"[{\"content\":\"Quoted in Chris Ryder, <em>Inside the Maze: The Untold Story of the Northern Ireland Prison Service<\/em> (Methuen, 2001), 14.\",\"id\":\"bc170a1d-a915-40ca-9aff-39e89389373f\"},{\"content\":\"Primo Levi, <em>Survival in Auschwitz<\/em>, trans. Stuart Woolf (Touchstone, 1996), 29.\",\"id\":\"52666e3a-7fdf-4c4b-83e8-272694b9e69a\"}]"},"categories":[2497],"tags":[2161,768,1414,105,127,664],"pbpartner":[],"section":[1338],"pbseries":[],"class_list":["post-64938","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-reviews","tag-antiquities","tag-carceral-state","tag-enlightenment","tag-incarceration","tag-philosophy","tag-prison","section-politics"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.4 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>There Are More Prisons in Heaven &amp; Earth\u2026 - Public Books<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"&quot;A political philosophy of the prison with no necessary relationship to the realities of the prison is a luxury we can ill afford.&quot; &quot;A political philosophy of the prison with no necessary relationship to the realities of the prison is a luxury we can ill afford.&quot;\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.publicbooks.org\/there-are-more-prisons-in-heaven-earth\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"There Are More Prisons in Heaven &amp; 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