Bültmann & Gerriets
Prestige Television and Prison in the Age of Mass Incarceration
A Wall Rise Up
von Victoria M. Bryan
Verlag: Routledge
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-1-138-23451-2
Erschienen am 03.09.2019
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 240 mm [H] x 161 mm [B] x 13 mm [T]
Gewicht: 396 Gramm
Umfang: 148 Seiten

Preis: 201,70 €
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Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

Victoria M. Bryan is the Honors Program Director and Associate Professor of English at Cleveland State Community College, USA. She is also founder and director of the Turn the Page Literacy Initiative that operates in Southeast Tennessee. Dr Bryan earned her PhD in English from the University of Mississippi in 2014.



Introduction - "A False Solution": Understanding Prisons through Pop Culture, and the Potential of Prestige Television in the Age of Mass Incarceration 1. "Daniel Has Risen from the Dead": Solitary Confinement, Social Death, and the Fallibility of Memory in Rectify 2. "Not for Correction, but for Storage": Incarceration as Cultural Trauma in American Horror Story 3. "We Need the Prison": Troubling the Age of Mass Incarceration via the Undead Body in The Walking Dead 4. "I Got a Lot of Prisons in My Life": Using the Prison Industrial Complex to Complicate Ideals of American Freedom in Orange Is the New Black Conclusion - "Revenge Isn't Justice": The Master's Tools and the Siren Song of Reform



Television shows that we might call 'prestige television' represent prison in ways that are sometimes reductive, sometimes powerful, and sometimes exceedingly complex. This book examines various programmes across the genres of drama, comedy and horror that utilize prison or places of incarceration as a central theme or setting to show how they conform to or challenge the standard conversation about the prison industrial complex and the common understanding of prisons as violent spaces where we house the worst among us.
Drawing on the work of Angela Davis, Doran Larson, Dylan Rodriguez, Michelle Alexander, and Lisa Guenther, the author presents focused studies of Orange Is the New Black, Rectify, American Horror Story and The Walking Dead (along with briefer discussions of The 100, police procedurals, and popular sitcoms) to explore the responsibility of television to represent prison in as authentic a fashion as possible, the exploitation of the incarcerated in reductive representations of prison, and the shifting nature of the national conversation about prison as it is depicted on screen. As such, the book will appeal to scholars of cultural and media studies, criminology and sociology with interests in incarceration and representations of prison in popular culture.


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