Journal article
The "other" side of labor reform: Accounts of incarceration and resistance in the straits settlements Penal system, 1825-1873
A Pieris
Journal of Social History | Published : 2011
DOI: 10.1093/jsh/shr082
Abstract
The rhetoric surrounding the transportation of prisoners to the Straits Settlements and the reformative capacity of the penal labor regime assumed a uniform subject, an impoverished criminal, who could be disciplined and accordingly civilized through labor. Stamford Raffles, as lieutenant governor of Benkulen, believed that upon realizing the advantages of the new colony, criminals would willingly become settlers. These two colonial prerogatives of labor and population categorized transportees into laboring classes where their exploitation supposedly brought mutual benefit. The colonized was collectively homogenized as a class of laborers and evidence to the contrary, of politically challeng..
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