Freeing the Carceral Imagination: Prisons, Criminalization, and Ruse of Righteous Violence

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Bol The carceral imaginary explains Americans’ stubborn attachment to prisons, and we can only escape its racist and colonialist myths with different kinds of narrative practices. The carceral imaginary explains Americans’ stubborn attachment to or at least acceptance of prisons, both in the hyperbolic tough-on-crime practices and in seemingly progressive sectors.Joining a critical reading of John Locke with theorists of storytelling, the imaginary, decolonial theory, and carceral logic, Shari Stone-Mediatore brings new philosophical resources to bear on the question of how Americans have become so attached to punishment-based social policies despite the failure of our vast network of prisons to protect us from harm. Stone-Mediatore argues that, alongside the political and economic forces driving prison expansion, a carceral imaginary in which we have become deeply invested emotionally has bonded our imaginations to carceral myths and prevented us from thinking meaningfully about safety and justice. Tracing a pattern in the violence-rationalizing myths studied by Frantz Fanon, Enrique Dussel, James Baldwin, and Ida B. Wells, Stone-Mediatore develops a theory of the righteous-violence imaginary. Viewing contemporary U.S. punitiveness—which has led to the incarceration of nearly two million Americans in 6,000 jails and prisons across the country—through this lens, she elucidates the structure of our carceral imaginary and how it embroils us in ever more needs for violence and mythmaking.Stone-Mediatore explores how stories that take us on journeys with those on the other side of prison walls can help unsettle the masonry of carceralism and build support for safety practices that do not perpetuate trauma and abuse but advance our mutual healing.

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The carceral imaginary explains Americans’ stubborn attachment to prisons, and we can only escape its racist and colonialist myths with different kinds of narrative practices. The carceral imaginary explains Americans’ stubborn attachment to or at least acceptance of prisons, both in the hyperbolic tough-on-crime practices and in seemingly progressive sectors.Joining a critical reading of John Locke with theorists of storytelling, the imaginary, decolonial theory, and carceral logic, Shari Stone-Mediatore brings new philosophical resources to bear on the question of how Americans have become so attached to punishment-based social policies despite the failure of our vast network of prisons to protect us from harm. Stone-Mediatore argues that, alongside the political and economic forces driving prison expansion, a carceral imaginary in which we have become deeply invested emotionally has bonded our imaginations to carceral myths and prevented us from thinking meaningfully about safety and justice. Tracing a pattern in the violence-rationalizing myths studied by Frantz Fanon, Enrique Dussel, James Baldwin, and Ida B. Wells, Stone-Mediatore develops a theory of the righteous-violence imaginary. Viewing contemporary U.S. punitiveness—which has led to the incarceration of nearly two million Americans in 6,000 jails and prisons across the country—through this lens, she elucidates the structure of our carceral imaginary and how it embroils us in ever more needs for violence and mythmaking.Stone-Mediatore explores how stories that take us on journeys with those on the other side of prison walls can help unsettle the masonry of carceralism and build support for safety practices that do not perpetuate trauma and abuse but advance our mutual healing.

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Pagina's: 214, Hardcover, Bloomsbury Academic


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Merk Bloomsbury Academic
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  • 9781666958270
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