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ID078561
Title ProperImperial modernity, national identity and capital punishment in the Samarcand Arson Case, 1931
LanguageENG
AuthorBickford, Annette Louise
Publication2007.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article draws upon the fascinating and little known 1931 Samarcand Arson Case involving the possible execution of adolescent white female inmates at a juvenile reformatory in North Carolina. Marked by nationalist discourses, the spectacle generated by this case indicates much about how white New South advocates construed national life and sought to construct a white 'civilised' collective identity, defending their region from Northern charges of Southern barbarism and asserting their place within the imperial politics of American nation building. The decision not to execute any of the sixteen defendants was informed by a series of interconnected ideas about sexuality, national danger, 'civilisation' and 'race,' suggesting that the presumed 'legal chivalry' extended to the young defendants was not a simple matter of gender bias, but involved a nuanced set of reasons related to negotiations of national belonging through racialised alliances
`In' analytical NoteNations and Nationalism Vol. 13, NO.3; Jul 2007: p437-460
Journal SourceNations and Nationalism Vol. 13, NO.3; Jul 2007: p437-460
Key WordsAlterity ;  Juridical Discretion ;  Juvenile Reform ;  National identity ;  National Spectacle