Contributions by Bart Beaty, Jenny Blenk, Ben Bolling, Peter E. Carlson, Johnathan Flowers, Antero Garcia, Dale Jacobs, Ebony Flowers Kalir, James Kelley, Susan E. Kirtley, Frederik Byrn KΓΈhlert, John A. Lent, Leah Misemer, Johnny Parker II, Nick Sousanis, Aimee Valentine, and Benjamin J. Villarreal
Prison Pedagogies: Learning and Teaching with Imprisoned Writers
β Scribed by Joe Lockard (editor)| Sherry Rankins-Robertson (editor)
- Publisher
- Syracuse University Press
- Year
- 2018
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 294
- Edition
- Illustrated
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
In a time of increasing mass incarceration, US prisons and jails are becoming a major source of literary production. Prisoners write for themselves, fellow prisoners, family members, and teachers. However, too few write for college credit. In the dearth of well-organized higher education in US prisons, noncredit programs
established by colleges and universities have served as a leading means of informal learning in these settings. Thousands of teachers have entered prisons, many teaching writing or relying on writing practices when teaching other subjects. Yet these teachers have few pedagogical resources. This groundbreaking collection of essays provides such a resource and establishes a framework upon which to develop prison writing programs.
Prison Pedagogies does not champion any one prescriptive approach to writing education but instead recognizes a wide range of possibilities. Essay subjects include working-class consciousness and prison education; community and literature writing at different security levels in prisons; organized writing classes in jails and juvenile halls; cultural resistance through writing education; prison newspapers and writing archives as pedagogical resources; dialogical approaches to teaching prison writing classes; and more. The contributors
within this volume share a belief that writing represents a form of intellectual and expressive self-development in prison, one whose pursuit has transformative potential.
β¦ Table of Contents
Contents
Illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part One
Free Writing and Unfree Writers
Prison Writing Education and US Working-Class Consciousness
WordsUncaged
Prison Writing
Freedom within Limits
Something Other Than Progress
Part Two
Jail and Juvenile Hall Writing
Curating Counternarratives beyond Bars
Writing with Incarcerated Teen Women
βCan a Poem Stop a Jail from Being Built?β
Part Three
Organized Prison Writing
Writing, Bodies, and Performance
The Arthur Kill Alliance
Prison Writing Instruction and the American Prison Writing Archive
Writing-about-Writing Pedagogies in Prison
Contributors
Index
β¦ Subjects
prison literature
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