“Not only is Tip of the Spear an important addition to the growing volume of literature regarding the role of prisons in the racist capitalist state that is the United States, the thesis of the text represents a major evolution in the historical representation of US prisons.”
— CounterPunch
“A remarkable account of how prison repression and reform intertwine, one that poses fundamental dilemmas about whether our legal system can ever properly serve movements for social change. It is a book that will unsettle and enrage you. It should also become the account of Attica that every interested person reads.”
— Inquest
"With Tip of the Spear, Burton hasn’t just salvaged the imprisoned Black radical tradition from the condescension of liberal posterity, but provided a singular lesson in militant intellectual method, shedding stark illumination on the counterinsurgent genealogy of prison reform (between philanthropy and psyops) while doing justice to an abolitionist horizon oriented toward maximum demands rather than piecemeal adaptations."
— Verso Author Pick
"Not only is Tip of the Spear an important addition to the growing volume of literature regarding the role of prisons in the racist capitalist state that is the US, the thesis of the text represents a major evolution in the historical representation of US prisons."
— The Morning Star
“This book is essential material for undergraduate and graduate courses not only in anthropology, but in a range of disciplines drawing from Black radical theory, abolition and critical prison studies, archives of war and counter-insurgency, masculinity and gender studies, geography, sociology, and the history of social movements in the United States. This is a deep work, rigorously engaging with archives that have historically been dismissed, overlooked, or repressed. It is also beautifully written, inviting us into the worldmaking of Attica.”
— Medical Anthropology Quarterly
"Meticulously researched and fascinating. . . . By placing the prison struggle as part of a domestic war, this book makes an enormous contribution to efforts to fight against prison expansion and for true abolition."
— Against the Current
"Burton’s book gives readers a new conceptual language, a new framework, and a new orientation for any future research on Black radical consciousness, carcerality, and abolition. It will change the fields of critical carceral studies and counterinsurgency and will give new direction to the anthropology of Black masculinity and prisons as sites of warfare."
— Current Anthropology
"A model of committed historical and ethnographic scholarship, Burton has produced an analysis of revolution and counter-insurgency in the crucible of racialized class war that is the prison while also leaving us with a methodology for rigorous, principled work that foregrounds the knowledge and experiences of the people whose potential to be the protagonists of history is precisely the reason for their captivity. In this way, Burton has essentially succeeded in writing a book that is both excavation of the past and blueprint for how to read present and future struggles."
— Crime Media Culture
"Tip of the Spear makes visible the inextricable links between anti-Blackness, nation state-sanctioned surveillance of marginalized populations, and the violent ends to which the nation-state will go to suppress race-based liberation that threatens to undermine white supremacy and the ‘legitimacy’ of a carceral system that functions because of oppressive policy making. . . . This text is an invaluable addition to abolition theory and scholarship."
— Ethnic Studies Review
"This book covers a good deal of historical, sociological, and anthropological ground in its critique of mass incarceration and related strategies of social control. The detailed interconnections that it draws between US carcerality, Black radical thought, and abolitionist approaches to social inequality demand stringent reassessment of academia’s and public policy’s conventional ways of interpreting unequal relations of power. . . . Tip of the Spear should be read by everyone, including scholars, students, activists, and the broader reading public."
— Anthropological Quarterly
"Orisanmi Burton takes narrative and analysis to another level. His scholarship comprehends resistance with a nuance that I have not seen delivered by most academics."—Joy James, author of In Pursuit of Revolutionary Love and New Bones Abolition
"Tip of the Spear transforms our understanding of prison rebellion. In so doing, the book offers a stunning contribution to Black radical thought and abolitionist scholarship and politics. Exquisitely researched and argued, this is a must-read."—Sarah Haley, author of No Mercy Here: Gender, Punishment, and the Making of Jim Crow Modernity
"In this meticulously researched and beautifully written book, Burton presents one of the most dynamic accounts of Black revolutionary struggle against the prison industrial complex to date. Burton centers Black radical action as the hub of knowledge production to explain the function, implementation, and logic of the carceral apparatus over the past fifty years. Powerfully arguing against the ill-conceived notion of Black revolt as spontaneous and state violence as the happenstance of misguided policy, Burton carefully takes the reader through a rigorously developed source map to understand the breadth and depth of prisons within the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. With a brilliant array of methodological, conceptual, and theoretical interventions, Tip of the Spear is a must-read and is fundamental to the study of prisons and movements against prisons."—Damien Sojoyner, author of Joy and Pain: A Story of Black Life and Liberation in Five Albums