"A brave and brilliant report on the tyranny of the caste system and continuing feudal practices in India's villages.
Freedomville rips apart the cliche of India being the largest democracy in the world and shows us how millions of Indians are deprived of their basic constitutional freedoms and rights."
–Basharat Peer, author of A Question of Order: India, Turkey, and the Return of Strongmen, and a Contributing Writer for The New York Times "A powerful, damning account of economic growth, beautifully told through the tragic story of the fight for freedom from slavery of tribals in India. A must-read for anyone wanting to understand modern slavery, the fragility of ideas of freedom, the place of violence in bringing about progressive change, and modern India."
–Alpa Shah, professor, Department of Anthropology, London School of Economics, and author of Nightmarch: Among India's Revolutionary Guerrillas "Laura Murphy brings a formidable array of experiences and skills to this compelling project. Trained in literary studies and the author of previous works on slave narratives of the past and human rights abuses in the present, she makes effective use in
Freedomville of research techniques associated with oral history, ethnography, and investigative journalism while demonstrating a novelist's feel for scene setting, character development, and pacing."
–Jeffrey Wasserstrom, Chancellor's Professor of History at the University of California, Irvine, and author of Vigil: Hong Kong on the Brink "In
Freedomville, Laura Murphy returns to an Indian village known to many as an anti-slavery success story, where she uncovers complex interconnections, unresolved truths, and a community and its former enslavers wrestling with mechanization, globalization, and environmental racism. Drawing on her deep understanding of historical slave resistance and modern human trafficking policy, Murphy echoes Dr. Martin Luther King's warning that Emancipation cannot become an uncashed promissory note, but must be an ongoing guarantee of liberty and opportunity."
–Ambassador (ret.) Luis C.deBaca, Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition, Yale University