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Journal ArticleDOI

The Curious Eclipse of Prison Ethnography in the Age of Mass Incarceration

Loïc Wacquant
- 01 Dec 2002 - 
- Vol. 3, Iss: 4, pp 371-397
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TLDR
A survey of the recent sociology and anthropology of carceral institutions shows that field studies depicting the everyday world of inmates in America have gone into eclipse just when they were most needed on both scientific and political grounds following the turn toward the penal management of poverty and the correlative return of the prison to the forefront of societal scene as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
This article first takes the reader inside the Los Angeles County Jail, the largest detention facility in the `Free World', to give a ground-level sense of how the entry portal of the US detention system operates by way of prelude to this special issue on the ethnography of the prison. A survey of the recent sociology and anthropology of carceral institutions shows that field studies depicting the everyday world of inmates in America have gone into eclipse just when they were most needed on both scientific and political grounds following the turn toward the penal management of poverty and the correlative return of the prison to the forefront of the societal scene. Accordingly, this issue seeks to reinvigorate and to internationalize the ethnography of the carceral universe understood both as a microcosm endowed with its own material and symbolic tropism and as vector of social forces, political nexi, and cultural processes that traverse its walls. Field researchers need to worry less about `interrupting t...

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Journal ArticleDOI

Punishment Beyond the Legal Offender

TL;DR: In the United States, lawbreakers are treated as social isolates, and the sentences imposed upon them are conceived of as affecting a discrete individual as discussed by the authors, however, people who commit or are suspected of committing crimes are generally embedded in kinship webs and social networks that draw others into the ambit of the state's punishment apparatus.
Journal ArticleDOI

Autoethnography and Emotion as Intellectual Resources: Doing Prison Research Differently

TL;DR: It is argued that a more frank acknowledgment of the convergence of subject-object roles does not necessarily threaten the validity of social science, or at least, “it is a threat with a corresponding gain.”
Journal ArticleDOI

Disciplined Hearts: History, Identity, and Depression in an American Indian Community@@@The Way of the Pipe: Aboriginal Spirituality and Symbolic Healing in Canadian Prisons

TL;DR: A Story of Trauma, Healing and Transformation: Rediscovering the pipe as discussed by the authors, a story of trauma, healing and transformation, in Aboriginal Inmates, Incarceration, Racism, and Identity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards more effective community participation in urban regeneration: the potential of collaborative planning and applied ethnography:

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that policymakers often set up local partnerships with insufficient knowledge of the "culture" (i.e. structure, processes, practices, relations and agents) of the neighbourhoods and communities they seek to regenerate and involve in decision-making.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reading Difference Differently? Identity, Epistemology and Prison Ethnography

TL;DR: The authors explored the epistemological and methodological dilemmas relating to identity and positionality in anthropological and sociological ethnographies through a reflexive interrogation of a study of prisoner identities and social relations in two male prisons.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison

Robert D'Amico
- 20 Jun 1978 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present La Volonté de Savoir, the methodological introduction of a projected five-volume history of sexuality, which seems to have a special fascination for Foucault: the gradual emergence of medicine as an institution, the birth of political economy, demography and linguistics as human sciences, the invention of incarceration and confinement for the control of the "other" in society (the mad, the libertine, the criminal) and that special violence that lurks beneath the power to control discourse.
Book

Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison

TL;DR: Foucault shows the development of the Western system of prisons, police organizations, administrative and legal hierarchies for social control and the growth of disciplinary society as a whole as discussed by the authors.
Book

Asylums: Essays on the Social Situation of Mental Patients and Other Inmates

TL;DR: "Asylums" is an analysis of life in 'total institutions' - closed worlds like prisons, army camps, boarding schools, nursing homes and mental hospitals that focuses on the relationship between the inmate and the institution.