64 pages • 2 hours read
Michelle AlexanderA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
To explain the inner workings of mass incarceration and systemic racism more generally, Alexander borrows a metaphor from American philosopher Marilyn Frye, who likens racism to a birdcage. Paraphrasing Frye, Alexander writes:
If one thinks about racism by examining only one wire of the cage, or one form of disadvantage, it is difficult to understand how and why the bird is trapped. Only a large number of wires arranged in a specific way, and connected to one another, serve to enclose the bird and to ensure that it cannot escape (228).
Aside from the fact that the subject of Alexander’s book is literal cages, the metaphor is very fitting for her purposes. During Jim Crow, Americans were trained to understand racism only in its most virulent and explicit forms. Thus, when Americans look to only one court case involving policing, presumably decided on race-neutral grounds; or only one piece of legislation calling for increased police funding, presumably to keep the streets safe; or only one media story, calling attention to a crime committed by a Black man, they do not see racism. Yet when one considers all these factors as intricately connected strands of a larger system that causes grossly disproportionate racial outcomes, the metaphysical cage becomes as easy to recognize as a literal cage.
One of the most common refrains found across The New Jim Crow is “closing the courthouse doors” (137). By this, Alexander means the litany of Supreme Court decisions that effectively prohibit litigants from claiming racial bias in all but the most obvious and egregious cases. Again and again, courts permit police and prosecutors to behave in ways that show clear patterns of racial bias. And yet as long as those individuals and departments can provide even the most implausible race-neutral reason for their actions, they may continue to spread their racial biases in a system that is already racially biased by design. Alexander adds that this is yet another way in which America’s refusal to see race in the era of colorblindness enabled the growth and perpetuation of the criminal justice system. Moreover, the courts’ failure to protect racial bias claimants—whether on the basis of the Fourth Amendment, the Sixth Amendment, or the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment—leaves Alexander to place her hopes on grassroots political mobilization as opposed to the federal judiciary.