March 1, 202600:42:18

The Architecture of the Dungeon: Toni Morrison and the 13th Amendment

The Omelas basement has a physical address in America: the prison-industrial complex. 

This week, we use the lens of Toni Morrison’s literary criticism to interrogate the 13th Amendment and the ‘Hideous Bargain” of mass incarceration. If the basement is built into our laws, can we ever truly ‘walk away’?

We analyze Toni Morrison’s book Playing in the Dark and the prison-industrial complex through the documentary film 13th. We discuss the ‘Architecture of the Dungeon,’ and the ‘Hideous Bargain’ of American systemic racism.  We discuss how ‘white silence’ sustains the Omelas basement and why dismantling the ‘Utopia Illusion’ requires an open and strenuous engagement with marginalized narratives and those of the Western white canon.

The Omelas framework is both the literal and literary architecture of the American dungeon: the prison-industrial complex. We identify the 13th Amendment’s ‘punishment clause’ as the legal anchor for the ‘Hideous Bargain,’ where the civil liberties of the majority are tethered to the systemic extraction of life from the imprisoned. Through Morrison’s lens, we recognize that ‘white silence’ acts as the mortar in these walls, sustaining a ‘Utopia Illusion’ that requires the intentional obliviousness of the privileged class.

Episode 6.28 – The Architecture of the Dungeon: Toni Morrison and the 13th Amendment Readings & Resources:
  • DuVernay, Ava, 13th (documentary film, 2016)
  • Morrison, Toni. Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination (1992)
  • Morrison, Toni. “Recitatif.” (1983)
Some Key Terms from this episode:
  • Africanism (or Africanist Presence):  Fabricated, denotative, and connotative blackness that African peoples have come to signify within Eurocentric thought; a backdrop against which white identity and freedom are constructed.
  • Copaganda:  Portmanteau of “cop” and “propaganda,” coined by Alec Karakatsanis, describing media that shows policing, state violence, and the criminal justice system as inherently fair, noble, and necessary.
  • 13thism: A historical paradigm and narrative trope which argues that the Reconstruction era did not end slavery, but instead used the Thirteenth Amendment’s exception clause as the legal foundation for the mass re-enslavement of African Americans.

 

Listener’s Guide Reflection Questions How does the presence of a “legal exception” for slavery in the 13th Amendment shift our perception of the Constitution from a ‘Declaration of Freedom’ to a ‘Manual for Management’? If we consider ‘silence’ as a physical building material, what structures in your immediate community appear to be supported by what is not being said? In what ways does the ‘psychological manufacture’ of a criminal’s identity serve to protect the moral comfort of mainstream society? If the ‘Garden Walls’ of our reading choices seal us in with our own illusions, what specific ‘frictions’ are required to break them? How does the ‘Extraction of Labor’ from the marginalized physically manifest in the ‘Abundance’ of our modern digital and physical harvests? Complete Resources: https://waywordsstudio.com/project/le-guin-omelas/ CHAPTERS

00:00     Advisory
01:51     Turning the Camera Around
07:24     Intro Theme
07:59     Personae
19:20     Studies in Morrison
26:18     Legal Loopholes: 13th
38:39     Spare Parts
41:01     Closing Credits

 

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Transcript and Bibliography (most accurate):  https://waywordsstudio.com/general/transcript/6-28-morrison-and-13th New to Literary Nomads?

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Literary Nomads is the main program of Waywords Studio (https://waywordsstudio.com). The podcast posts new material each week, with thought-provoking examinations of literature around selected questions or themes and several smaller supplemental episodes in between the larger programs: history, writing, and contemporary applications of ideas.

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CREDITS:

Original music by Randon Myles (https://randonmyles.com/)

Chapter headings by Natalie Harrison and Sarah Skaleski

USING THIS WORK:

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. It is open to be used and adapted for all not-for-profit uses with proper attribution.

MLA CITATION:

Chisnell, Steve. “6.28 The Architecture of the Dungeon: Toni Morrison and the 13th Amendment,” Literary Nomads. Waywords Studio, 27 February 2026, https://waywordsstudio.com/project/le-guin-omelas/.

No transcript available.