Captive State: Louisiana and the Making of Mass Incarceration
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The Historic New Orleans Collection 533 Royal Street, New Orleans, Louisiana 70130
Louisiana’s present-day distinction as the world’s incarceration capital is rooted in three centuries of history. Throughout this history, people in power have used systems of enslavement and incarceration to hold others captive for punishment, control, and exploitation—disproportionately affecting Black Louisianans. Through historical objects, textual interpretation, multimedia, and data visualization, the Historic New Orleans Collection's newest exhibition, Captive State: Louisiana and the Making of Mass Incarceration, investigates these through lines and arrives at an irrefutable truth: that the institutions of slavery and mass incarceration are historically linked.
Captive State tells this story in two parts. The first outlines how Louisiana’s colonial and early American governments created race-based systems of oppression through legislation, policing, imprisonment, and violence that matured as New Orleans became the hub of the domestic slave trade. The second part traces how the Louisiana Constitution of 1898 enabled an era of mass incarceration in the 20th and 21st centuries. The exhibition concludes with a reflection question, reading recommendations, and information on ways to get involved on issues related to mass incarceration.
Gallery hours are Tuesdays–Saturdays, 9:30 am–4:40 pm, and Sundays 10:30 am–4:30 pm. hnoc.org.