E-Book, Englisch, 788 Seiten, eBook
Reihe: Progress in Mathematics
Harmes The Palgrave Handbook of Incarceration in Popular Culture
1. Auflage 2020
ISBN: 978-3-030-36059-7
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
E-Book, Englisch, 788 Seiten, eBook
Reihe: Progress in Mathematics
ISBN: 978-3-030-36059-7
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Editors’ Introduction.- Preface - Professor Jeffrey Ross, University of Baltimore.- Chapter one: Unlocking Prisons: Toward a Carceral Taxonomy - Associate Professor James Oleson, University of Auckland.- Section One: Prison and prisoner representations.- Chapter two: The 1980s behind Bars: the Punitive System in Prison (1987) and Lock Up (1989) - Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni Berns, Juan Juvé and Mariana Zárate, Universidad de Buenos Aires.- Chapter three: Freeing every Last man of Shawshank: a Reading of Frank Darabont’s The Shawshank Redemption - Debaditya Mukhopadhyay, Manikchak College.- Chapter four: Incarceration as a Dated Badge of Honour: The Sopranos and the Screen Gangster in a Time of Flux - Robert Hensley-King, Ghent University.- Chapter five: ‘So Neglect Becomes Our Ally’: Strategy and Tactics in the Chateau D'If in Kevin Reynolds' The Count of Monte Cristo (2002) - DrKwasu D Tembo, University of Edinburgh.- Chapter six: Prisons on Screen in 1970s Britain - Dr Marcus K Harmes, Meredith A Harmes, Dr Barbara Harmes, University of Southern Queensland.- Chapter seven: Porridge Reheated: Rewriting the Prison Sitcom - Eleanor March, University of Surrey.- Chapter eight: In the Name of the Father: (Re)Framing the Guildford Four - Dr Fran Pheasant-Kelly, University of Wolverhampton, UK.- Chapter nine: ‘You’re in trouble mate’: Prison and Screen Practice - Dr Lewis Fitz-Gerald, University of New England.- Chapter ten: How Does the Design of the Prison in Paddington 2 (2017) Convey Character, Story and Visual Concept? - Jane Barnwell, University of Westminster.- Section Two: Prisoner reactions to representation.- Chapter eleven: Reading Bronson from Deep on the Inside: An Exploration of Prisoners Watching Prison Films - Dr Victoria Knight, De Montfort University, UK and Dr Jamie Bennett, University of Oxford, UK.- Chapter twelve: Voices from the Inside: Prison Podcasts - Dr Dawn K. Cecil, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg.- Chapter thirteen: A Place to Stand: the Importance of Inmate Narratives in Media - Nathan Young, Arizona State University.- Chapter fourteen: Mediated Representations of Prisoner Experience and Public Empathy - Dr Katrina Clifford, Deakin University and Professor Rob White, University of Tasmania.- Section Three: Out of the depths: media creations from inside prison.- Chapter fifteen: Prison on Screen in Italy: From ‘Shame Therapy’ Propaganda to Citizenship Programs - Dr Nicoletta Policek, University of Cumbria, UK.- Chapter sixteen: Make Do and Mend: Images and Realities of Prisoners’ Positive Creativity - Charlotte Bilby, Reader in Criminology, Northumbria University.- Chapter seventeen: ‘O Prison Darkness … Lions in the Cage’; The ‘Peculiar’ Prison Narratives of Guantánamo Bay - Dr Josephine Metcalf, University of Hull.- Chapter eighteen: Ghost Ships in the Sea: Guantánamo Bay Detainee Art and a Torturous Exhibition - Emilee Grunow, University of Minnesota--Twin Cities.- Section Four: Learning from prison: ethics, education, and audiences.- Chapter nineteen: The Lord of the Flies in Palo Alto - Professor James Oleson, Auckland University.- Chapter twenty: Story as ‘Freedom,’ Story as ‘Prison’: Narrative Invention and Human Rights Interventions in Camp 14: Total Control Zone - Professor David Scott Diffrient, Colorado State University.- Chapter twenty-one: An Evaluation of the Effect of Prison Break on Youth Perception of Prison - Dr Okechukwu Chukwuma, Islamic University in Uganda, Kampala Campus and Julius Omokhunu, Edo State, Nigeria.- Section Five: Sensational prisons: incarceration and punishment as reality TV.- Chapter twenty-two: Tacumbú in the News: Non-Sensational Reporting of a Perpetually Unfolding Real-Life Prison Drama - Timothy Revett, New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary.- Chapter twenty-three: Bad Teens, Smug Hacks & Good TV: The success and legacy of Scared Straight! - Catherine Harrington, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL.- Chapter twenty-four: The Same, but Different: Discourses of Familiarity and Fear in 60 Days In - Dr Faye Davies, Birmingham City University, UK.- Chapter twenty-five: Reality TV: Instilling Fear to Avoid Prison - Dr Erin DiCesare, Johnson C. Smith University.- Chapter twenty-six: The Queen without a Kingdom: Vulnerability, Martyrization, Monolingualism and Injury Towards a Quechua Speaking Woman Imprisoned in Argentina - Dr Sergio Rodríguez-Blanco, Universidad Iberoamericana, Mexico City.- Chapter twenty-seven: Women Behind Bars: Dissecting Social Constructs Mediated by News and Reality TV - Jennifer Thomas, Howard University.- Chapter twenty-eight: Monstrous Celebrity and Train-Wreck Femininity: The Tabloid-isation of Prisons and Prisoners - Dr Susan Hopkins, University of Southern Queensland.- Section Six: Genre and prisons: Black Mirror and beyond.- Chapter twenty-nine: Speculative Punishment, Incarceration, and Control in Black Mirror - Dr David Pierson, University of Southern Maine.- Chapter thirty: Carceral Imaginaries in Science Fiction: Toward a Palimpsestic Understanding of Penality - Kaitlyn Quinn, Department of Sociology, University of Toronto, Erika Canossini, Department of Sociology, University of Toronto Vanessa Evans, Department of English, York University.- Chapter thirty-one: ‘It's more like an eternal waking nightmare from which there is no escape’: Media and Technologies as (Digital) Prison in Black Mirror - Julie Escurignan, University of Roehampton and Dr François Allard-Huver, University of Lorraine.- Chapter thirty-two: Dark Fantasies: The Prisoner and the Futureof Imprisonment - Dr Marcus Harmes, Meredith Harmes, Dr Barbara Harmes, University of Southern Queensland.- Chapter thirty-three: Minority Report, Abjection and Surveillance: Futuristic Control in the Scientific Imaginary - Dr Fran Pheasant-Kelly, University of Wolverhampton, UK.- Chapter thirty-four: Moral Ambivalence and the Executioner’s Hood – Averting the Retributive Gaze in Dystopian Fiction - Dr Francine Rochford, La Trobe University, Australia.- Section Seven: Creative and commercial transformations: dark tourism in dark places.- Chapter thirty-five: Dark Tours: Prison Museums and Hotels - Associate Professor James Oleson, Auckland University.- Chapter thirty-six: ‘Pack of thieves?’: The visual representation of prisoners in dark tourist sites - Dr Jenny Wise and Dr Lesley McLean, University of New England, Australia.- Chapter thirty-seven: The Legend of Madman’s Hill: Incarceration, Madness and Dark Tourism on the Goldfields - Dr David Waldron, Federation University Australia.- Chapter thirty-eight: Three Related Danish Narratives: the Film ‘R’, the Penal Museum at Horsens and the Replacement Prison of East Jutland - Dr Jack Dyce.- Chapter thirty-nine: ‘Ulucanlar from Prison to Museum: Struggle on Memory and the Future in Turkey’ - Dr Mine Gencel Bek, University of Siegen.- Section Eight: Orange is the New Black: race and gender in a television phenomenon.- Chapter forty: Introduction to Imprisonment by the ‘Nice White Lady’: Piper Chapman as the Ideal Racialised and Classed Neoliberal Subject - Kate Meakin, University of Sussex.- Chapter forty-one: Can Prison be a Feminist Space?: Interrogating Television Representations of Women’s Prisons - Jessica Ford, University of New South Wales, Australia.- Chapter forty-two: Advocating Prisoners’ Human Rights: A Textual Analysis of Orange is the New Black - Dr Alina Thiemann, Institute of Sociology, the RomanianAcademy.- Chapter forty-three: Is Yellow the New Orange? Vis a Vis: The Transnational Phenomenon of Female Prison Dramas and the Rise of Spanish Television - Julia Echeverría, University of Zaragoza, Spain.- Section Nine: Varieties of incarceration: from Wentworth to Bitch Planet.- Chapter forty-four: Wentworth and the Politics and Aesthetics of Representing Female Embodiment in Prison - Cornelia Wächter, Ruhr University Bochum, Germany.- Chapter forty-five: From the Stony Ground Up: the Unique Affordances of the Gaol as ‘Hub’ for Transgressive Female Representations in Women-in-Prison Dramas - Stayci Taylor (RMIT University, Melbourne), Craig Batty (University of Technology, Sydney), Tessa Dwyer (Monash University, Melbourne), Radha O’Meara (University of Melbourne).- Chapter forty-six: ‘Are You Woman Enough to Survive?’: Bitch Planet’s Collaborative Critique of the Neo-Liberal Prison-Industrial Complex - Dr Martin Zeller-Jacques, Queen Margaret University.- Chapter forty-seven: The Pleasure Politics of Prison Erotica - Dr Nicoletta Policek, University of Cumbria, UK.- Chapter forty-eight: Let’s Have Redemption! Women, Religion and Sexploitation on Screen - Dr Marcus Harmes, Meredith Harmes, Dr Barbara Harmes, University of Southern Queensland.- Section Ten: Exploitation and racialization in prison: film, memoirs and music.- Chapter forty-nine: Screening Fear and Anxiety: African American Incarceration and the Dawning of the Prison-Industrial Complex - Assistant Professor Keith Corson, University of Central Arkansas.- Chapter fifty: ‘If These Walls Could Talk’: The Prison Motif in the Work of Kendrick Lamar - Chelsea Roden, Universität Heidelberg, Germany.- Chapter fifty-one: How Race and Criminality Interface Through Memoir, Drawing & Film: an Investigation of Austin Reed, Frank Jones Jamaa Fanaka - Ravi Shankar, University of Sydney, Australia.