The Prisoners' World

Portraits of Convicts Caught in the Incarceration Binge

By (author) William S. Tregea, Marjorie S. Larmour

Not available to order

Publication date:

16 March 2009

Length of book:

372 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

ISBN-13: 9780739132555

Drawing on twenty-five years of teaching prison college and volunteer classes in eleven Michigan and California prisons, The Prisoners' World strives to make the 'prisoners' voice' come alive for regular college students. The book starts off by tracing shifts in social definitions of criminality, and lays out the premises of the U.S. incarceration binge in the 1986 War on Drugs laws and subsequent mandatory sentencing and policing. Later chapters discuss issues such as leaving home, cell life, correctional officers and treatment, the homosexual prisoner, and drugs. Furthermore, the book discusses the teachers' experiences via author narrative essays that draw the reader into prisoner student and prisoner teacher interaction, and what it is like inside prison college classes where both young and older black prisoner students describe growing up in the inner cities. The book also draws upon over sixty prisoner essays that provide insight on prisoner life and self-concept with insights on pathways to prison, drug selling, the inner city and guns. There is also a strong focus on the 'inside' experiences of entering prison and orientation, daily work routine, correctional officers and surreptitious activities like cell cooking and contraband. These essays are capped by prisoner critiques of prison life from those still in the system. The Prisoners' World serves as a successful supplemental book whose material has proven useful in undergraduate criminal justice classes. As college students themselves, on-campus students in these classes will identify with the prisoner-student voices who share their experiences but in a radically different environment.
William Tregea and Marjorie Larmour, authors of The Prisoner's World, have been teaching college level courses in Michigan prisons for more than twenty-five years, so they're in an outstanding position to observe the boom from inside and hear about its meaning from both prisoners and other correctional workers. The prison-college classroom is a remarkably interesting vantagepoint....The rich descriptive materials...and the personal narratives in Prisoners' World provide an excellent addition to thehighly theoretical and macro-oriented sociology of mass incarceration....A thought-provoking account of the prison world that's been created in the last half century.