Massachusetts Historical Society

Event

The Disappearance of Sarah Simmons: Escape Notices & the Racial Imperatives of the Carceral State

Hybrid

Author: Micah Khater, University of California, Berkeley
Comment: Cheryl Hicks, University of Delaware

This is a hybrid event. The in-person reception will begin at 4:30 PM.

In 1924, a racially ambiguous woman named Sarah Simmons escaped from an Alabama prison and later eluded police who searched for her in Chicago at the behest of their southern counterparts. Simmons’ confrontations with and evasion from the state bring attention to the evolving relationship between prisons and slavery and specifically to the ways that the southern carceral regime imported a specific technology from slavery: the runaway slave advertisement. This paper analyzes Simmons' attempts to vanish as part of a longer genealogy of Black women whose freedom was contingent on their ability to thwart the supposedly knowable categories of Blackness.

Join the conversation at the African American History Seminar. Seminars bring together a diverse group of scholars and interested members of the public to workshop a pre-circulated paper. Learn more.

Purchasing the $25 seminar subscription gives you advance access to the seminar papers of all seven seminar series for the current academic year. Subscribe at 3xft3.litpliant.net/research/seminars. Subscribers for the current year may login to view currently available essays.

Register to attend in person

Register to attend online

Hybrid Event

The in-person reception starts at 4:30 PM and the seminar will begin at 5:00 PM.

Masks are optional for this event.

The virtual seminar begins at 5:00 PM and will be hosted on the video conference platform, Zoom. Registrants will receive a confirmation message with attendance information.

Upcoming Events

The Latest

Blog
Videos
Podcast