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Carceral Nation

How the Prison Escaped Its Walls and Made a Panopticonic Society

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Carceral Nation

By: David Boles
Narrated by: Alan Taylor
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Walk south on Peachtree Street in downtown Atlanta on any Tuesday morning in 2026, and you will pass through more layers of surveillance than a federal inmate encountered in a maximum-security facility in 1975. You will not feel them. That is the point.

Carceral Nation traces three centuries of surveillance, discipline, and control as they migrated from the prison yard to the schoolroom, the workplace, the digital platform, and the public square. Beginning with colonial lantern laws that required enslaved people to carry lit candles after dark and moving through Bentham's panopticon, Foucault's theoretical escalation, the Cold War intelligence apparatus, the post-9/11 mass surveillance state, the commercial data economy, and the neighborhood platforms where citizens now report one another's movements, the book documents how a nation built on liberty constructed an invisible infrastructure of observation that touches every citizen.

The argument began on Boles Blogs in December 2006 with an article on mass incarceration and the carceral citizen. In October 2008, the domains CarceralNation.com and Panopticonic.com were registered, and the dedicated Panopticonic blog joined the fourteen-blog Boles Blogs Network. Twenty years of continuous writing on surveillance and the panoptic principle became this book.

©2026 David Boles (P)2026 David Boles
Americas Politics & Government Social Sciences United States
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