Harris skillfully shows how white elites in Jamaica and Barbados used corporal punishment to blur the line separating free and apprenticed Africans and people of African descent from the enslaved long after emancipation. She offers powerful evidence of the plantation economy’s lingering, violent impact on Black bodies in the nineteenth century. While specialists may find much of its source material familiar, this book is a welcome addition to the growing scholarship on the history of the body and the history of punishment and surveillance in the pre- and post-emancipation British Caribbean.