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Book Synopsis


Trade Review
“A uniquely valuable intervention. Those of us--and I would say that is the majority of us who live our lives ‘in freedom’--are importuned by the book’s address, to wake up, to care, because what we perceive as our ‘freedom’ made available, so we think, as a consequence of living in the crucible of liberal ideals and beliefs--is inextricably bound up with the logics of incarceration.”--Fawzia Afzal-Khan, author of Siren Song: Understanding Pakistan Through its Women Singers

Table of Contents
Foreword Demita Frazier

Acknowledgments

Introduction Shreerekha Pillai

Part One: Carceral Narratives and Fictions

Poems: Honorée Fanonne Jeffers, “Pantoum for a Black Man on a Greyhound Bus” and “Lost Letter #27: John Peters, Boston-Gaol to Phillis Wheatley Peters, Boston, December 3, 1784″

1. Carceral Trauma at the Intersections of Race, Class, Gender, Sexuality, and Maternity

Cassandra D. Little

2. Prisons and Politics: Conceptualizing Prison Memoirs

Shailza Sharma

3. Seeing Orange: Mediatizing the Prison Empire

Shreerekha Pillai

4. Emptied Chairs and Faceless Inmates: A Critical Analysis of the Texas Prison Museum

Beth Matusoff Merfish

Poems: Ravi Shankar, “Against Innocence” and “Sunday School” The Stories that will not be Confined

Poems: Solmaz Sharif, “Reaching Guantánamo”

Part Two: Carceral Bodies and Systems

Poem: Jeremy Eugene, “Space”

5. These Stories Will Not Be Confined

Joanna Eleftheriou

6. Cornered: Day Laborers, Criminalization and Rituals of Democracy in Texas

Francisco Argüelles Paz y Puente, aka Pancho

7. Resisting Criminalization: Principles, Practicalities, and Possibilities of Alternative Justices Beyond the State

Autumn Elizabeth, Zarinah Agnew, D Coulombe

8. Going Carceral? Analyzing Written and Visual Representations of Prison Yoga Programs

Tria Blu Wakpa and Jennifer Musial

9. Vacant Refuge, Unfinished Resettlement: Gendered Nativism and the Experience of Ambivalence among Displaced Syrian Iraqi and Women and Children in Houston, Texas

Maria F. Curtis

10. Gendered Punishment and Social Control: Silenced Memories of Women in Wartime Peru

Marta Romero-Delgado

11. Bad Girls of Pindra Tod

Alka Kurian

Poem: Javier Zamora, “Citizenship”

Contributors

Index

Carceral Liberalism

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A Hardback by Shreerekha Pillai, Shreerekha Pillai, Demita Frazier

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    View other formats and editions of Carceral Liberalism by Shreerekha Pillai

    Publisher: University of Illinois Press
    Publication Date: 05/09/2023
    ISBN13: 9780252045189, 978-0252045189
    ISBN10: 0252045181

    Description

    Book Synopsis


    Trade Review
    “A uniquely valuable intervention. Those of us--and I would say that is the majority of us who live our lives ‘in freedom’--are importuned by the book’s address, to wake up, to care, because what we perceive as our ‘freedom’ made available, so we think, as a consequence of living in the crucible of liberal ideals and beliefs--is inextricably bound up with the logics of incarceration.”--Fawzia Afzal-Khan, author of Siren Song: Understanding Pakistan Through its Women Singers

    Table of Contents
    Foreword Demita Frazier

    Acknowledgments

    Introduction Shreerekha Pillai

    Part One: Carceral Narratives and Fictions

    Poems: Honorée Fanonne Jeffers, “Pantoum for a Black Man on a Greyhound Bus” and “Lost Letter #27: John Peters, Boston-Gaol to Phillis Wheatley Peters, Boston, December 3, 1784″

    1. Carceral Trauma at the Intersections of Race, Class, Gender, Sexuality, and Maternity

    Cassandra D. Little

    2. Prisons and Politics: Conceptualizing Prison Memoirs

    Shailza Sharma

    3. Seeing Orange: Mediatizing the Prison Empire

    Shreerekha Pillai

    4. Emptied Chairs and Faceless Inmates: A Critical Analysis of the Texas Prison Museum

    Beth Matusoff Merfish

    Poems: Ravi Shankar, “Against Innocence” and “Sunday School” The Stories that will not be Confined

    Poems: Solmaz Sharif, “Reaching Guantánamo”

    Part Two: Carceral Bodies and Systems

    Poem: Jeremy Eugene, “Space”

    5. These Stories Will Not Be Confined

    Joanna Eleftheriou

    6. Cornered: Day Laborers, Criminalization and Rituals of Democracy in Texas

    Francisco Argüelles Paz y Puente, aka Pancho

    7. Resisting Criminalization: Principles, Practicalities, and Possibilities of Alternative Justices Beyond the State

    Autumn Elizabeth, Zarinah Agnew, D Coulombe

    8. Going Carceral? Analyzing Written and Visual Representations of Prison Yoga Programs

    Tria Blu Wakpa and Jennifer Musial

    9. Vacant Refuge, Unfinished Resettlement: Gendered Nativism and the Experience of Ambivalence among Displaced Syrian Iraqi and Women and Children in Houston, Texas

    Maria F. Curtis

    10. Gendered Punishment and Social Control: Silenced Memories of Women in Wartime Peru

    Marta Romero-Delgado

    11. Bad Girls of Pindra Tod

    Alka Kurian

    Poem: Javier Zamora, “Citizenship”

    Contributors

    Index

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