Capturing Labor: A History of Unfree Work in the Southwest

Edited by Jessica R. Pliley , John Mckiernan-gonzález
Skip to product information

Capturing Labor: A History of Unfree Work in the Southwest

Edited by Jessica R. Pliley , John Mckiernan-gonzález
Release date:
Regular price $56.66
Sale price $56.66 Regular price $0.00
Final Sale. No returns or exchanges.
Oversized: This item will be shipped by appointment through our delivery partner.
Overweight: This item will be shipped by appointment through our delivery partner.

Digital download

Immediate access in your Kobo library

Deliver to

In stock online. Free shipping on orders over $49

Buy online, pick up at Bay & Floor

Free pick up today

Find it in store

Out of stock

Found in: History & Political Science, US History

Earn 284 plum points and save more with plum Rewards. Learn more

View full details

Overview

280 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details
  • Published date: Apr 14, 2026
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 280
  • Publisher: University Of Texas Press
  • ISBN: 9781477333457
  • Dimensions: 6.3" W x 1.0" L x 9.3" H

Jessica R. Pliley is a professor of women?s and gender history at Texas State University. She is the author of Policing Sexuality: The Mann Act and the Making of the FBI and the coeditor of Fighting Modern Slavery and Human Trafficking: History and Contemporary Policy and Global Anti-Vice Activism, 1890?1950: Fighting Drinks, Drugs, and ?Immorality.?

John Mckiernan-González is the director of the Center for the Study of the Southwest and an associate professor of history at Texas State University. He is the author of Fevered Measures: Public Health and Race at the Texas-Mexico Border, 1848?1942 and coeditor of Precarious Prescriptions: Contested Histories of Race and Health in North America.

Capturing a persistent history of unfree labor, this outstanding collection questions triumphalist interpretations of freedom by documenting slavery, peonage, indentured, contract, unpaid, and carceral arrangements well into the twentieth century. The Southwest emerges as central to capital accumulation through the bodies of Black, Mexican, Indigenous, and poor white workers. The brothel, "Native" boarding school, "feebleminded" asylum, and the prison join fields, restaurants, and factories as sites of coercion and exploitation, reinforced by law but subject to the struggles of working people themselves. In the process, Pliley and Mckiernan-González powerfully demonstrate the ways that reproductive labor feeds into racial capitalism.

- Eileen Boris, UC Santa Barbara, author of Making the Woman Worker: Precarious Labor and the Fight for Global Standards, 1919–2019

Recently Viewed