Surveilling Social Difference: Black Women’s "Alley Work" in Industrializing Minneapolis
No Thumbnail Available
Can’t use the file because of accessibility barriers? Contact us
Date
2017-12-05
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Permanent Link
Abstract
This article examines the arrest records of black women who worked as sex workers in downtown Minneapolis in the late 19th and early 20th centuries who were referred to as “alley workers.” I demonstrate the ways in which black women’s alley work documents the coming together of photography and surveillance as constitutive of the broader project of the modernization of police work through the procedures of standardization offered by the Bertillon System of Criminal Identification. I draw on women of color feminism, visual cultural studies, and critical race studies to analyze the alley work historical archive as a representational account of black women’s sexual regulation. My argument is that the Bertillon system’s attempts to categorize alley work functions as a strategy of surveillance that regulates black women’s economic and social difference. The police’s efforts to identify alley work as economically transgressive positions black sexual labor as an unruly site of social management in the context of industrializing Minneapolis.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Fair, Alfretter Latasha. "Surveilling Social Difference: Black Women’s "Alley Work" in Industrializing Minneapolis." Surveillance & Society, vol. 15, no. 5, pp. 655-675, 2017-12-5, https://doi.org/10.24908/ss.v15i5.6283.
Journal
Surveillance & Society