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In his cogent and groundbreaking book, From Slave Ship to Supermax,
Patrick Elliot Alexander argues that the disciplinary logic and
violence of slavery haunt depictions of the contemporary U.S.
prison in late twentieth-century Black fiction. Alexander links
representations of prison life in James Baldwin's novel If Beale
Street Could Talk to his engagements with imprisoned intellectuals
like George Jackson, who exposed historical continuities between
slavery and mass incarceration. Likewise, Alexander reveals how
Toni Morrison's Beloved was informed by Angela Y. Davis's jail
writings on slavery-reminiscent practices in contemporary women's
facilities. Alexander also examines recurring associations between
slave ships and prisons in Charles Johnson's Middle Passage, and
connects slavery's logic of racialized premature death to scenes of
death row imprisonment in Ernest Gaines' A Lesson Before Dying.
Alexander ultimately makes the case that contemporary Black
novelists depict racial terror as a centuries-spanning social
control practice that structured carceral life on slave ships and
slave plantations-and that mass-produces prisoners and prisoner
abuse in post-Civil Rights America. These authors expand free
society's view of torment confronted and combated in the prison
industrial complex, where discriminatory laws and the
institutionalization of secrecy have reinstated slavery's system of
dehumanization.
New thinking about the role of education in confined environments.
As the work of Malcolm X, Angela Y. Davis, and others has made
clear, education in prison has enabled people to rethink systems of
oppression. Courses in reading and writing help incarcerated
students feel a sense of community, examine the past and present,
and imagine a better future. Yet incarcerated students often lack
the resources, materials, information, and opportunity to pursue
their coursework, and training is not always available for those
who teach incarcerated students. This volume will aid both new and
experienced instructors by providing strategies for developing
courses, for creating supportive learning environments, and for
presenting and publishing incarcerated students' scholarly and
creative work. It also suggests approaches to self-care designed to
help instructors sustain their work. Essays incorporate the
perspectives of both incarcerated and non-incarcerated teachers and
students, centering critical prison studies scholarship and
abolitionist perspectives. This volume contains discussion of Mumia
Abu-Jamal's Live from Death Row, Marita Bonner's The Purple Flower,
Suzanne Collins's The Hunger Games, Mary Shelley's Frankenstein,
and William Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew and Othello.
New thinking about the role of education in confined environments.
As the work of Malcolm X, Angela Y. Davis, and others has made
clear, education in prison has enabled people to rethink systems of
oppression. Courses in reading and writing help incarcerated
students feel a sense of community, examine the past and present,
and imagine a better future. Yet incarcerated students often lack
the resources, materials, information, and opportunity to pursue
their coursework, and training is not always available for those
who teach incarcerated students. This volume will aid both new and
experienced instructors by providing strategies for developing
courses, for creating supportive learning environments, and for
presenting and publishing incarcerated students' scholarly and
creative work. It also suggests approaches to self-care designed to
help instructors sustain their work. Essays incorporate the
perspectives of both incarcerated and non-incarcerated teachers and
students, centering critical prison studies scholarship and
abolitionist perspectives. This volume contains discussion of Mumia
Abu-Jamal's Live from Death Row, Marita Bonner's The Purple Flower,
Suzanne Collins's The Hunger Games, Mary Shelley's Frankenstein,
and William Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew and Othello.
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