Forced Passages: Imprisoned Radical Intellectuals And the U.S. Prison RegimeU of Minnesota Press, 2006 - 322 pagini More than two million people are currently imprisoned in the United States, and the nation’s incarceration rate is now the highest in the world. The dramatic rise and consolidation of America’s prison system has devastated lives and communities. But it has also transformed prisons into primary sites of radical political discourse and resistance as they have become home to a growing number of writers, activists, poets, educators, and other intellectuals who offer radical critiques of American society both within and beyond the prison walls. In Forced Passages, Dylan Rodríguez argues that the cultural production of such imprisoned intellectuals as Mumia Abu-Jamal, Angela Davis, Leonard Peltier, George Jackson, José Solis Jordan, Ramsey Muniz, Viet Mike Ngo, and Marilyn Buck should be understood as a social and intellectual movement in and of itself, unique in context and substance. Rodríguez engages with a wide range of texts, including correspondence, memoirs, essays, poetry, communiqués, visual art, and legal writing, drawing on published works by widely recognized figures and by individuals outside the public’s field of political vision or concern. Throughout, Rodríguez focuses on the conditions under which imprisoned intellectuals live and work, and he explores how incarceration shapes the ways in which insurgent knowledge is created, disseminated, and received. More than a series of close readings of prison literature, Forced Passages identifies and traces the discrete lineage of radical prison thought since the 1970s, one formed by the logic of state violence and by the endemic racism of the criminal justice system. Dylan Rodríguez is assistant professor of ethnic studies at the University of California, Riverside. |
Din interiorul cărții
Rezultatele 1 - 5 din 52
Pagina 2
... cultural production, my subjectivity, autobiography, and desire are present throughout this text. I am focusing my theoretical attention on the post-1970s formation of “radical prison praxis,” which I fully conceptualize in chapter 2 as ...
... cultural production, my subjectivity, autobiography, and desire are present throughout this text. I am focusing my theoretical attention on the post-1970s formation of “radical prison praxis,” which I fully conceptualize in chapter 2 as ...
Pagina 3
... cultural genocides, mass-based bodily violence, racialized domestic warfare, and targeted, coercive misery. At its most ambitious, this book is attempting to generate a modality and momentum of political articulation that elaborates the ...
... cultural genocides, mass-based bodily violence, racialized domestic warfare, and targeted, coercive misery. At its most ambitious, this book is attempting to generate a modality and momentum of political articulation that elaborates the ...
Pagina 5
... (cultural and biological) genocide, military occupation, communal displacement, white-supremacist apartheid, and neoliberalism. Although my conceptualization of “imprisoned radical intellectuals” incorporates (and centers) the political ...
... (cultural and biological) genocide, military occupation, communal displacement, white-supremacist apartheid, and neoliberalism. Although my conceptualization of “imprisoned radical intellectuals” incorporates (and centers) the political ...
Pagina 6
... cultural, and military proliferation of the state's racialized domestic warfare techniques, hallmarked by the 1980s intensiWcation of the “War on Drugs,” and accompanied by a drastic police militarization, punitive juridical shift, and ...
... cultural, and military proliferation of the state's racialized domestic warfare techniques, hallmarked by the 1980s intensiWcation of the “War on Drugs,” and accompanied by a drastic police militarization, punitive juridical shift, and ...
Pagina 7
... cultural speciWcity of the “imprisoned radical intellectual” in order to foreground the counter- and antisystemic, radical and revolutionary materiality of this political lineage. Imprisoned radical intellectuals, as I argue throughout ...
... cultural speciWcity of the “imprisoned radical intellectual” in order to foreground the counter- and antisystemic, radical and revolutionary materiality of this political lineage. Imprisoned radical intellectuals, as I argue throughout ...
Cuprins
1 | |
Conceptualizing the US Prison Regime | 39 |
The Context of Radical Prison Praxis | 75 |
George Jackson Angela Davis and the Fascism Problematic | 113 |
Punitive Incarceration and State Terror amid No Middle Ground | 145 |
Prison Standoffs and the Logic of Death | 185 |
The Routes and Precedents of Prison Slavery | 223 |
Acknowledgments | 257 |
Notes | 261 |
Prison Activism and Support Resources | 303 |
305 | |
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
Forced Passages: Imprisoned Radical Intellectuals and the U.S. Prison Regime Dylan Rodriguez Nu există previzualizare disponibilă - 2006 |
Forced Passages: Imprisoned Radical Intellectuals and the U.S. Prison Regime Dylan Rodriguez Nu există previzualizare disponibilă - 2006 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
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