Witness in the Era of Mass Incarceration : Discovering the Ethical Prison (The Fairleigh Dickinson University Press Series in Law, Culture, and the Humanities)

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Witness in the Era of Mass Incarceration : Discovering the Ethical Prison (The Fairleigh Dickinson University Press Series in Law, Culture, and the Humanities)

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 196 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781611479829
  • DDC分類 809.8920692

Full Description

Witness in the Era of Mass Incarceration works from the premise that if the law establishes and maintains both its practical and symbolic authority on the basis of its monopoly on legally sanctioned violence and the suffering threatened and delivered by such violence, then we cannot know the full human cost or concrete moral status of any legal state without human witness to the depth and manner of suffering meted out by such violence. The prison writer stands in the position to offer such witness. The prison writer knows the law's violence in the flesh. For every other writer, reflection upon the degree and manner of suffering meted out under legal sanction—that is, reflection upon the full human cost of the contemporary legal order—is necessarily speculative. In close readings of first-person witness from prisons in the U.S., Ireland, and Africa, Witness in the Era of Mass Incarceration discovers literary tropes that chart at once local, national, and transnational conditions of carceral experience—the extant conditions of legalized suffering. In exhibiting the labor required to move from institutionalized abjection to the minimum requirements of rights-bearing personhood, this witness offers the sole credible vision of the possibility of a post carceral understanding of freedom.

Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Toward a Prison Poetics
2. Poetry, Pain, and Reconstructive Resistance
3. Three Studies in Testamentary Reconstruction
4. B(e)aring Bare Life: Ethnic American Prison Writing
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
About the Author

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