Into the Eight Ball: The Colonialists
Boston College Third World Law Journal
Volume 12 | Issue 1
Article 5
1-1-1992
Into the Eight Ball: The Colonialists' Landscape in
American Criminal Justice
James M. Doyle
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Recommended Citation
James M. Doyle, Into the Eight Ball: The Colonialists' Landscape in American Criminal Justice, 12 B.C.
Third World L.J. 65 (1992), http://lawdigitalcommons.bc.edu/twlj/vol12/iss1/5
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INTO THE EIGHT BALL: THE
COLONIALISTS' LANDSCAPE IN AMERICAN
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
JAMES M. DOYLE"
Africa as setting and backdrop which eliminates the African as a human
factor. Africa as a metaphysical battlefield devoid of all recognizable humanity,
into which the wandering European enters at his peril. Can nobody see the
preposterous and perverse arrogance in thus reducing Africa to the role of
props for the break-up of one petty European mind?
Chinua Achebe 1
George Orwell, at loose ends after leaving Eton, followed his
father into the Indian Civil Service and served for five years in the
Imperial Indian Police. After his return to England, he summarized
his experience of imperial life in his novel Burmese Days. For the
" Senior Trial Counsel, Roxbury Defenders, Boston, Massachusetts. B.A. 1972, Trinity
College; J.D. 1975, Northwestern University School of Law; LL.M. 1979, Georgetown University Law Center.
This essay represents a fragment of a much larger project that attempts to explore
certain correspondences and resonances between the accounts of Third World life given by
colonialist officials of the imperial era and the accounts of the contemporary American inner
city contained in the crime dramas and official memoirs of criminal justice service that saturate
our popular culture. Readers who are interested in pursuing the issue further might consider
James Doyle, "It's the Third World Doum There!": The Colonialist Vocation in American Criminal
Justice, 27 HARV. C.R.-C.L. L. REV. (forthcoming 1992). The effort is not prompted by a
desire to prove that criminal justice officials-prosecutors, police, defenders, judges, probation officers, and others-are ')ust like" or ')ust as bad as" the imperial servant whom they
evoke. Rather, it is prompted by the recognition that, like their imperialist forerunners,
contemporary criminal justice officials stand astride the lines of communication between two
widely separated societies. The point of this essay is not to damn the criminal justice officials
with their predecessors' sins, but to see what can be learned from the colonialist era.
I am grateful to the editors of the Boston College Third World Law Journal for giving
a home to so eccentric a contribution. I am also grateful to James Ridgeway, Phyllis Goldfarb,
Richard Cohen, and Palmer Singleton, who made helpful comments concerning earlier drafts
of this essay.
Finally, I should make explicit for readers of this fragment something that would emerge
more naturally from the completed project. In this essay, I write critically of the perspective
of the criminal justice White Men, and it may seem that I regard myself as superior to the
criminal justice professionals, believe that I am better and wiser. Nothing could be further
from the truth. I have spent my entire professional life representing indigents in urban
criminal courts, and I chose the White Men's vision as my subject, not because I am free of
it, but precisely because I realize that I suffer from it myself.
I Chinua Achebe, An Image of Africa: Racism in Conrad's Heart of Darkness, in HOPES
AND IMPEDIMENTS, SELECTED ESSAYS 1, 12 (1989).
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novel's epigraph he chose a quotation from As You Like It: "This
desert inaccessible / Under the shade of melancholy boughs."2 The
two lines do more than foreshadow Orwell's book; they epitomize
the setting of every account of the European official's experience
of the colonial encounter. It is a setting that gives those accounts
much of their interest and that conveys much of their meaning.
With eerie consistency, novels, movies, memoirs, news stories,
and cop-shows that depict official life in the contemporary American criminal justice system rely on similar settings to create similar
effects. The plots change-sometimes the cops win, sometimes the
robbers; sometimes the problem is drugs, sometimes murder-but
the location is always the same. Reports of each career describe
journeys to a strange, deserted place: a place that is inaccessible to
casual visitors and radically separated from the life that the travelers
had previously shared with their readers and viewers. Conrad, Orwell, Kipling, and their colleagues found this place on the edges of
empires. The criminal justice professionals find their own "Third
World" in the ghetto home of the American underclass-the innercity world they see as so self-contained and so all-black that Albert
Murray has ironically christened it "the Eight Ball."3 Each group of
officials experiences its "Third World" as a place of melancholy in
the Elizabethan sense, as a place of active, painful misery. Elaborate
passages of descriptive writing-prose landscapes that paint in lurid
tones visions of wastelands in Africa or in the South Bronx-dominate the officials' reports from both contexts. Here, for example,
is Scott Turow, a former prosecutor, relaying (in Presumed Innocent)
the reaction of Rusty Sabich, his fictional prosecutor, to a housing
project:
The small balconies at the rear of each apartment have been
curtained off with chicken wire to end the rain of suicides,
infants, drunks, and persons pushed, who, over the first five
years, became a sauce upon the pavement below. Most of the
sliding glass doors to the balconies have been replaced with
plywood sheets; and from the balconies themselves a wide variety of objects hang, including laundry, garbage cans, gang
banners, old tires, car parts, or, in winter, anything that profits
by being kept out of the heat. No sociologist can portray how
far the life in these three concrete towers is from the existence
2 GEORGE ORWELL, BURMESE DAYS (1967). The fullest description of Orwell's choice of
the Burma Police is found in Peter Stansky & William Abrahams, The Unknown Orwell (1974).
See also BERNARD CRICK, GEORGE ORWELL: A LIFE (1980).
3 ALBERT MURRAY, THE OMNI-AMERICANS 69-70 (1970).
1992]
INTO THE EIGHT BALL
67
most of us know. It is not Sunday school, was [police officer]
Lionel Kenneally's favorite phrase. And he was right; it was not.
But it was more than cheap irony or even rabid racism could
comprehend. This was a war zone (...truncated)