Explores the ways in which prisons mirror the worst aspects of society-wide gender relations. The book includes contributions from activists, academics and prisoners. Topics looked at include roles that men play in prison and the connections between hierarchy and violence.
This is an excellent collection from a wide range of contributors. As America becomes more and more of a prison nation, prison masculinity is rapidly becoming the model for all masculinity, and understanding it becomes more and more essential not only for gender scholars but for anyone interested in thinking critically about our culture.
Timely and powerful voices for change
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
Sabo, Kupers and London in their new book Prison Masculinities offer a fresh and probing examination of not only what is wrong with our approach to prisons and prisoners in this country, but the prevailing mentalities and attitudes that actually foster violence both inside and outside prisons. Prison Masculinities offers the reader new insights into historic and current notions of "manhood" and how those notions have dehumanized prisoners and driven the ill-conceived "get tough with criminals" political philosophy that has all but eliminated serious efforts at rehabilitation of inmates. The book is particularly valuable in that it offers a broad range of material from academics, prison reform activists, and inmates who are passionate and brutally honest about this subject. Eminently readable, the content itself is painful to consider, because it chronicles our penchant as a society to revert to harsh measures that don't work because we're more comfortable with vengeance than compassion, because we associate vengeance with "manliness" and compassion with weakness. For those who seek to grapple with why our approach to crime and punishment is a failure, they need look no further than Prison Masculinities.
All sides of the story
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
Many books have been written by, about and for prisoners, but rarely do they have the scope and power of Prison Masculinities. By including poems, essays, and stories from a wide range of individuals involved in the criminal justice system, Kupers, Sabo and London create a dialogue about prisons that examines the often devstating effect of hegemonic notions of manhood. The feminist movement of the 1970's introduced a vocabulary to describe the pitfalls of gender stereotypes in relation to women, in particular, but it also introduced a criticism of normative male gender stereotypes as well. Prison Masculinities incorporates this gender theory, queer theory, and other post-modern thinking to engage the discussion of the effect of "manhood" on inmates before, after, and during their incarceration. The book traces the definition of manhood back to the origin of our country, when masculinity was defined in terms of autonomy and self-control. It then introduces the different incarcations this definition takes in communities where such self-control is often impossible due to poverty, race, and substance abuse. It then follows these men, whose relationship with prevailing notions of masculinity are already fraught with economic and social limitations, into prison, which was created to emasculate and disempower. Prison Masculinities then traces the effects of masculinity on all aspects of inmates' lives, relating it to race, health, sexuality, prison programs, law and male friendships. The book is both thorough and unrelenting. Rarely are so many viewpoints, and opinions gathered in one place to create such a unified voice, all demanding that we undertake a radical re-thinking of our ideas of what it means to be a man, not only for inmates and ex-offenders, but for all men.
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