Prison Writing in 20th-Century America
Title | Prison Writing in 20th-Century America PDF eBook |
Author | H. Bruce Franklin |
Publisher | Penguin |
Total Pages | 388 |
Release | 1998-06-01 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 9780140273052 |
"Harrowing in their frank detail and desperate tone, the selections in this anthology pack an emotional wallop...Should be required reading for anyone concerned about the violence in our society and the high rate of recidivism."—Publishers Weekly. Includes work by: Jack London, Nelson Algren, Chester Himes,Jack Henry Abbott, Robert Lowell, Malcolm X, Mumia Abu-Jamal, and Piri Thomas.
Prison Writing in 20th-Century America
Title | Prison Writing in 20th-Century America PDF eBook |
Author | H. Bruce Franklin |
Publisher | Penguin |
Total Pages | 368 |
Release | 1998-06-01 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 1440621284 |
"Harrowing in their frank detail and desperate tone, the selections in this anthology pack an emotional wallop...Should be required reading for anyone concerned about the violence in our society and the high rate of recidivism."—Publishers Weekly. Includes work by: Jack London, Nelson Algren, Chester Himes,Jack Henry Abbott, Robert Lowell, Malcolm X, Mumia Abu-Jamal, and Piri Thomas.
Prison Writings in 20th-Century America
Title | Prison Writings in 20th-Century America PDF eBook |
Author | H. Bruce Franklin |
Publisher | Turtleback Books |
Total Pages | |
Release | 1998-06-01 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 9781417703845 |
This unique collection dramatizes the history of the modern American prison with more than 60 selections--memoirs, stories, novels, poems--written in the last 100 years.
Prison Writings in 20th Century America
Title | Prison Writings in 20th Century America PDF eBook |
Author | H. Bruce Franklin |
Publisher | |
Total Pages | 304 |
Release | 1999-12-01 |
Genre | |
ISBN | 9780141180663 |
Doing Time
Title | Doing Time PDF eBook |
Author | Bell Gale Chevigny |
Publisher | Skyhorse |
Total Pages | 574 |
Release | 2011-11-01 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 1628722185 |
“Doing time.” For prison writers, it means more than serving a sentence; it means staying alive and sane, preserving dignity, reinventing oneself, and somehow retaining one’s humanity. For the last quarter century the prestigious writers’ organization PEN has sponsored a contest for writers behind bars to help prisoners face these challenges. Bell Chevigny, a former prison teacher, has selected the best of these submissions from over the last 25 years to create Doing Time: 25 Years of Prison Writing—a vital work, demonstrating that prison writing is a vibrant part of American literature. This new edition will contain updated biographies of all contributors. The 51 original prisoners contributing to this volume deliver surprising tales, lyrics, and dispatches from an alien world covering the life span of imprisonment, from terrifying initiations to poignant friendships, from confrontations with family to death row, and sometimes share extraordinary breakthroughs. With 1.8 million men and women—roughly the population of Houston—In American jails and prisons, we must listen to “this small country of throwaway people,” in Prejean’s words. Doing Time frees them from their sentence of silence. We owe it to ourselves to listen to their voices.
Prison Literature in America
Title | Prison Literature in America PDF eBook |
Author | Howard Bruce Franklin |
Publisher | Oxford University Press, USA |
Total Pages | 392 |
Release | 1989 |
Genre | African Americans in literature |
ISBN |
Prison Literature in America--the first full-length study of American prison literature--has become a landmark work in American cultural history, Marxist theory, and the relations between crime and art. This greatly expanded third edition contains much new material, especially on current prison literature, and the Annotated Bibliography of Published Works by American Prisoners and Ex-Prisoners has doubled since the 1978 edition.
Fourth City
Title | Fourth City PDF eBook |
Author | Doran Larson |
Publisher | MSU Press |
Total Pages | 482 |
Release | 2014-02-01 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 1628950196 |
At 2.26 million, incarcerated Americans not only outnumber the nation’s fourth-largest city, they make up a national constituency bound by a shared condition. Fourth City: Essays from the Prison in America presents more than seventy essays from twenty-seven states, written by incarcerated Americans chronicling their experience inside. In essays as moving as they are eloquent, the authors speak out against a national prison complex that fails so badly at the task of rehabilitation that 60% of the 650,000 Americans released each year return to prison. These essays document the authors’ efforts at self-help, the institutional resistance such efforts meet at nearly every turn, and the impact, in money and lives, that this resistance has on the public. Directly confronting the images of prisons and prisoners manufactured by popular media, so-called reality TV, and for-profit local and national news sources, Fourth City recognizes American prisoners as our primary, frontline witnesses to the dysfunction of the largest prison system on earth. Filled with deeply personal stories of coping, survival, resistance, and transformation, Fourth City should be read by every American who believes that law should achieve order in the cause of justice rather than at its cost.