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Phantom Racism and the Myth of Crime and Punishment

Special Issue: The Legacy of Stuart Scheingold

ISBN: 978-1-78190-343-8, eISBN: 978-1-78190-344-5

Publication date: 17 September 2012

Abstract

This chapter evaluates the allure and the danger of attributing race-laden crime politics to displaced anxiety. Stuart Scheingold's “myth of crime and punishment” was a path-setting theory of redirected fear, arguing that socioeconomic “fear of falling” is displaced onto street crime, where the simple morality tale of lawbreaker-versus-state offers the illusion of control. The danger of this theory, I argue, is that it purports to analyze post-1960s’ structural inequality, but it replicates the post-civil rights logic and language of racism as nonstructural – an irrationality, a misplaced emotion, a mere epiphenomenon of class. As a theory that hinges on the malfunction of redirecting structural anxieties onto symbols and scapegoats, the vocabulary of displaced anxieties links punitive (white) subjects to punished (black and Latino) objects through a diagnosis that is, by definition, beyond rationality. The vocabulary of displaced anxiety categorizes the racial politics of law and order as an emotional misfire, thereby occluding the ways in which racial interests are at stake in crime policy and carceral state development.

Citation

Murakawa, N. (2012), "Phantom Racism and the Myth of Crime and Punishment", Sarat, A. (Ed.) Special Issue: The Legacy of Stuart Scheingold (Studies in Law, Politics, and Society, Vol. 59), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 99-122. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1059-4337(2012)0000059009

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2012, Emerald Group Publishing Limited