Abstract

This piece explores the intimacies between U.S. prisons and the emergence of imperial imprisonment in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Guantánamo. This global archipelago of imprisonment centers around the figure of the Muslim, who haunts the geographic and imaginative spaces of American empire. Whether it be the crackdown on African American Muslims within U.S. prison regimes or the emergence of Abu Ghraib and Guantánamo, this piece explores the cartographies of American power that link the domestic prison to the colony in the “War on Terror.”

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