This book does a LOT for such a short volume. Kinney takes on executions, the KKK, the inquisition and torture, modern torture in the 20th and 21st centuries, black bloc protest groups & their treatment by authorities, and finally the racial profiling that is connected to hoods and hoodies. The quotes and anecdotes she relates are familiar and horrifying, from the Archbishop of York (the first black bishop and archbishop of the Church of England), being pulled over for the 8th time in 2000 by police officers and hassled for wearing a hooded anorak when it was raining, to a 1992 report on the LAPD that found, in addition to widespread profiling, that officials used the term NHI, "no humans involved" to describe cases involving young black men. And finally, the powerful final segment, begins: "On a drizzly evening, February 26, 2012, one teenager in a hoodie tried to make himself invisible, to keep his head down in a dangerous environment." There's a full page that just goes through every victim of police homicide and lists what they "shouldn't have done" according to apologists ("played outside...left the house...stayed home...been trans...been homeless" etc.).
It's not ALL incredibly depressing -- she also deals briefly with pop culture; there's one page that references Dune, The Lord of the Rings, Star Wars, Green Arrow, and The Hood. There's also just some cool facts, like about the invention of the hoodie (1930s, Rochester NY, by the Knickerbocker Knitting Company, which had just renamed itself Champion Knitwear). Surprisingly, this doesn't feel at odds with the rest of the book -- her tone is pretty much the same everywhere, just short of totally academic, with some more casual/colloquial phrases thrown in.
One of my fave quotes, from the part about European laws surrounding Burqinis: "With all these conflicting arguments about secularism, Islamophobia, compulsion, feminism, and misogyny, what's apparent is the preoccupation with surveilling and controlling women's bodies, hoods, and religious, personal, and gender expression. People are often uncomfortable with others who, for whatever reasons, negotiate their own relationships with their hoods."
I got this ARC thanks to Netgalley and Bloomsbury Academic. Much appreciated!