
Morris Bart Sr. Lecture Series: HNOC Captive State Book Tour
November 10 @ 12:00 pm - 2:00 pm
$10.00

The Captive State: Louisiana and the Making of Mass Incarceration book will be featured at several upcoming events including Morris Bart Sr. Lecture Series. Visit hnoc.org for the latest information.
As part of the Morris Bart Sr. Lecture Series at the New Orleans JCC, editor Nick Weldon will give a lecture about Captive State followed by a Q&A session and book signing. A kosher boxed lunch will be provided to attendees.
The event is $10/person or free for JCC members and registration is here: https://www.nojcc.org/events/2025/11/10/active-adult/morris-bart-sr.-lecture-series-captive-state/
About the book: For decades, Louisiana has had the highest incarceration rate in the United States. If it were a country, it would have the second-highest incarceration rate in the world. Far from a modern phenomenon, this distinction is rooted in more than three centuries of history—roots that extend out from the principal city of New Orleans, once the epicenter of the American slave trade. In its examination of the state’s long march toward confining more of its citizens than almost anywhere on earth, “Captive State: Louisiana and the Making of Mass Incarceration” arrives at an irrefutable truth: that the institutions of slavery and mass incarceration are historically linked. Adapted from the groundbreaking exhibition of the same name, Captive State traces the evolution of laws and customs that created this carceral system and that, by design, have disproportionately harmed Black Louisianians. Captive State accentuates this narrative with profiles of people impacted by these systems, spotlights on key historical objects, and insightful data visualizations. As the human and financial costs continue to mount, this book details the choices that led us here—and asks whether Louisiana is fated to remain captive to its history.
Book available for purchase: https://shophnoc.com/products/captive-state-louisiana-and-the-making-of-mass-incarceration