|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Joshua M. PricePublisher: Rutgers University Press Imprint: Rutgers University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.481kg ISBN: 9780813565583ISBN 10: 0813565588 Pages: 212 Publication Date: 01 July 2015 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Part I Elements of Social Death 1 Crossing the Abyss: The Study of Social Death2 Natal Alienation 3 Humiliation Part II Method and a History of Social Death 4 Dissemblance and Creativity: Toward a Methodology for Studying State Violence5 Racism, Prison, and the Legacies of Slavery 6 The Birth of the Penitentiary Part III Abolition Democracy 7 “Doesn’t Everyone Know Someone in Prison or on Parole?”8 Spirit Murder: Reentry, Dispossession, and Enduring Stigma9 States of Grace: Social Life against Social Death10 Conclusion: Failure and Abolition Democracy NotesReferencesIndexReviewsPrison and Social Death offers a look into the carceral state through a methodologically delicate participatory action research project. Beautifully written, profoundly human, and politically devastating, the text doubles as a critical history of the contemporary over-incarcerated United States and as a compelling exemplar of movement-based activist research. A significant text for students of prison studies, critical participatory methods and community based policy research. --Michelle Fine Distinguished Professor of Critical Psychology, The Graduate Center, CUNY (02/27/2015) Prison and Social Death is an engaging, thought-provoking analysis of the continuing U.S. prison crisis. Price provides valuable insights about the interconnectedness of gender, race, and (in)justice in the U.S. This nuanced account will be compelling and useful for academics and activists alike. --Jodie Lawston chair, department of women s studies, associate professor at California State Un (09/12/2014) """An urgent, moving and compassionate book … Prison and Social Death will appeal to general readers and academics alike, and should be required reading for anyone who desires a better understanding of the American penal system and race relations, contemporary human rights issues, and the sort of reforms that will have to be made before we can say with any real confidence that we live in a decent society."" * PopMatters * ""An eye-opening account of one county prison system and how it operates to take away liberties of those incarcerated and obstruct the same liberties after release … Recommended. Graduate students in sociology and criminology; criminal justice professionals."" * CHOICE * ""What sets Price's work apart from many others who have concisely written about the problems and ironies inherent in America's extremely punitive criminal justice system is his up-close and personal narrative approach to and discussion of his subject ... Price's narrative style facilitates readers more easily sitting back to reflect on his work, empathizing with his disappointments, and concluding that America's criminal justice and correctional practices are not cruel and unusual but are instead uniquely cruel and usual in ways that create the abyss that ironically contributes to the very social conditions and crime rates that policy makers use to rationalize those practices."" * PsycCRITIQUES * ""Prison and Social Death is an engaging, thought-provoking analysis of the continuing U.S. prison crisis. Price provides valuable insights about the interconnectedness of gender, race, and (in)justice in the United States. This nuanced account will be compelling and useful for academics and activists alike."" -- Jodie Lawston * chair, department of women’s studies, California State University, San Marcos * ""Prison and Social Death offers a look into the carceral state through a methodologically delicate participatory action research project. Beautifully written, profoundly human, and politically devastating, the text doubles as a critical history of the contemporary over-incarcerated United States and as a compelling exemplar of movement-based activist research. A significant text for students of prison studies, critical participatory methods and community based policy research."" -- Michelle Fine * Distinguished Professor of Critical Psychology, The Graduate Center, CUNY *" Prison and Social Death offers a look into the carceral state through a methodologically delicate participatory action research project. Beautifully written, profoundly human, and politically devastating, the text doubles as a critical history of the contemporary over-incarcerated United States and as a compelling exemplar of movement-based activist research. A significant text for students of prison studies, critical participatory methods and community based policy research. --Michelle Fine Distinguished Professor of Critical Psychology, The Graduate Center, CUNY Author InformationJOSHUA M. PRICE is an associate professor of sociology at SUNY-Binghamton and the author of Structural Violence: Hidden Brutality in the Lives of Women. He is the director of the Broome County Jail Health Project, based in upstate New York. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |