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Journal Article

Citation

Andreescu R. American, British and Canadian Studies 2017; 29(1): 65-83.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017)

DOI

10.1515/abcsj-2017-0019

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This article explores the manner in which the narratives in the Prison Noir volume (2014) edited by Joyce Carol Oates bring into view the limits and abusive practices of the American criminal justice system within the confines of one of its most secretive sites, the prison. Taking an insider's perspective-all stories are written by award-winning former or current prisoners-the volume creates room for the usually silent voices of those incarcerated in correctional facilities throughout the United States. The article engages the effects of "prisonization" and the subsequent mortification of inmates by focusing on images of death and dying in American prisons, whether understood as a 'social death,' the isolation from any meaningful intercourse with society, as a 'civil death,' the stripping away of citizenship rights and legal protections, or as the physical termination of life as a result of illness, murder, suicide or statesponsored execution. © 2017 American, British and Canadian Studies. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Civil death; Death; mortification; Murder; Prison literature; Rape; Social death; Solitary confinement; Suicide

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