The Modern City was Shaped by Policing Black Women's Sexuality
In a statement both unfair and true, I wish Anne Gray Fischer’s The Streets Belong to Us had come out a decade ago. The field of police history has exploded – importantly and fruitfully – over the past ten or so years. Thanks to a new generation of historians working in this area, most of whom are relatively young in the profession, we know so much more today about the histories of policing than we did when I first started working in the field in 2008. We know more about its origins in assorted regimes of social, economic, and racial control; about its terrible costs; about its globality and the ensuing boomerangs. It isn’t an overstatement to say that this cohort of scholars and the work they’ve produced have already made deep imprints on the fields of Black history and U.S. urban history, among others. It’s also no overstatement to say that this work, especially since May of 2020, has helped Americans (those willing to engage it, at least) better understand the depths and development of our own age’s ongoing policing crises.
And yet, I can’t help but think how much more nuanced this brilliant literature would be had its authors, myself more than anyone, had Fischer’s book at the ready to converse and grapple with. By way of example, when I wrote the introduction to my own book, sometime in early 2018, I did something of a (pun intended) cop-out, acknowledging to readers the book’s margins— or, in other words, what not to expect from it. Among other things, I wrote, “this book contains little in the way of gender analysis, and has little to say about how identities as cisgender men, cisgender women, and nonbinary people shaped their encounters with police.” This analytic limitation on my part wasn’t because I thought gender identities—and, critically, the way police read those identities—to be unimportant. Rather, after nearly eight years of working on that specific project and fully ten embedded in the history of policing, I didn’t know how to get at those stories: what archives and what methodologies would make them legible?
And this is why I wish The Streets Belong to Us had been around back then. These questions about gender, and the ways gender intersects with race and class, are Fischer’s central concerns as she interrogates the history of policing. Primarily though not exclusively focused on the cities of Los Angeles, Boston, and Atlanta, The Streets Belong to Us is about the ways police power was not just mapped upon, but built upon the bodies of Black women. As Fischer reminds us, “it is not enough to say that women are also policed or differently policed. Women’s bodies are an important and overlooked site on which police power—and the modern city—have been built” (4).
The policing of women’s sexuality – sexual policing – is the primary lens through which Fischer proves the argument. She traces the history of sexual policing from the racist “white slavery” panic of the Progressive Era up through the “Take Back the Night” movement and broken windows policing in the late twentieth century. In so doing, Fischer shows how the state established nonmartial sex as a criminal offense under the guise of “protecting” white women variously from the depredations of nonwhite men and from their own sexual impulses. These laws, in the long run, would be weaponized against Black women—including but not limited to those who labored as sex workers. The history she reveals here shows, critically, how sexual policing produced police power and legitimated policing as an institution during periods in which its legitimacy was deeply in question. It also shows how the racial geographies of urban America were constructed and maintained through sexual policing. Fischer does this by highlighting how the racist, expulsionist targeting of Black women as deviants and moral menaces by police, politicians, and unelected elites was essential to the gentrification and redevelopment of urban downtowns by the 1970s and 1980s.
To come back to why I wish the book was older: The Streets Belong to Us doesn’t speak at length about Chicago, the city I write the most about. But following a second read of the book in preparation for writing this piece, I went back to some of the primary sources I used in my book, to examine what I could’ve seen in them had I been looking while armed with Fischer’s interpretive lens. And sure enough, it’s there: a story, here there only in gross statistics, but illustrative and awaiting explication nonetheless. Between 1965 and 1975, the Chicago Police Department (CPD) radically escalated its repressive campaign on Black Chicago (which I knew) but did so in certain ways that uniquely singled out Black women (which I did not). In 1965, CPD arrested 4,245 women on charges of “prostitution and commercialized vice,” of whom 2,655, or roughly 62%, were Black. Ten years later, however, the numbers had jumped: 6,923 women were arrested that year on such charges, and fully 80% were Black. Perhaps most tellingly, during a decade in which the number of arrests for sex-work-related “crimes” increased by more than 60%, the number of white women arrested for such crimes decreased by nearly 20%.