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E-raamat: Cambridge Companion to American Prison Writing and Mass Incarceration

Edited by (Virginia Commonwealth University)
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This book tells the story of mass Incarceration in America through the writers who experienced it first-hand. It begins at mid-century with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X, whose insights about racism and the criminal justice system warned of what was to come. It takes off in the 1960s and 1970s with revolutionary writers like George Jackson, Assata Shakur, and Mumia Abu-Jamal, seeking liberation not just from prison but the oppressive structure of society that sustains it. It evolves in the post-revolutionary era with witnesses like Wilbert Rideau, Jack Henry Abbott, and Jimmy Santiago Baca, seeking self-determination and justice from these increasingly cavernous prison warehouses. And it ends with the stories of survivors like Shaka Senghor, Jarvis Masters, and Susan Burton in the 21st century seeking healing from the psychological trauma that led to prison as well as the trauma of prison.

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Tells the story of mass Incarceration in America through the writers who experienced it first-hand.
Figures; Contributors; Chronology; Acknowledgements; Preface Messages
from the American prison H. Bruce Franklin; Introduction David Coogan; Part
I. Forerunners:
1. Arresting Civil Rights: Dr. King in Jail S. Jonathan Bass;
2. Malcolm X's Prison Letters Herb Boyd; Part II. Revolutionaries:
3. No more
brothers in jail: the memoirs of black panther party leaders Eldridge
Cleaver, Bobby Seale and Huey P. Newton Flores A. Forbes;
4. George Jackson
and the afterlives of 'Full Revolt' Dylan Rodríguez;
5. Angela Davis:
radicalism and abolition Joy James;
6. Liberate Assata Shakur;
7. Leonard
Peltier's sun dance David Heska Wanbli Weiden;
8. Mumia Abu-jamal on death
row Johanna Fernández; Part III. Witnesses:
9. Albert Woodfox in solitary
confinement Ernest Kikuta Chavez;
10. Making journalism in prison: Wilbert
Rideau and Dannie Martin John J. Lennon;
11. Women's prison zines and
activism Liz Canfield and Becca Ringle;
12. State-raised convicts: Jack Henry
Abbott and Kenneth Hartman Doran Larson and Kenneth Hartman;
13. Becoming a
witness: Jimmy Santiago Baca Seth Michelson;
14. Transmitting the lore of
prison survival: from Amira Baraka to Etheridge Knight to Reginald Dwayne
Betts Michael S. Collins; Part IV. Survivors:
15. Men's prison memoirs of
trauma and recovery Ravi Shankar;
16. Reading wounds in women's prison
writing Moira Marquis;
17. Susan burton's new beginning Vivian D. Nixon;
18.
Qu(e)erying orange is the new black Kam Meakin; Guide to further reading;
Index.
David Coogan is a professor of English at Virginia Commonwealth University, the founder of Open Minds, a college program in the Richmond City Jail, the author of Writing Our Way Out: Memoirs from Jail (2015), written with ten formerly incarcerated men, and the director of a criminal justice diversion program based on that book.