Prison Writing and the Literary World: Imprisonment, Institutionality and Questions of Literary Practice
ISBN: 9781003105787
Platform/Publisher: Taylor & Francis / Routledge
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Unlimited; Download: Unlimited



Prison Writing and the Literary World tackles international prison writing
and writing about imprisonment in relation to questions of literary representation
and formal aesthetics, the "value" or "values" of literature,
textual censorship and circulation, institutional networks and literary-critical
methodologies. It offers scholarly essays exploring prison writing
in relation to wartime internment, political imprisonment, resistance and
independence creation, regimes of terror, and personal narratives of development
and awakening that grapple with race, class and gender. Cutting
across geospatial divides while drawing on nation- and region-specific expertise,
it asks readers to connect the questions, examples and challenges
arising from prison writing and writing about imprisonment within the
UK and the USA, but also across continental Europe, Stalinist Russia, the
Americas, Africa and the Middle East. It also includes critical reflection
pieces from authors, editors, educators and theatre practitioners with experience
of the fraught, testing and potentially inspiring links between prison
and the literary world.


Michelle Kelly is a Departmental Lecturer in World Literature in English
at the Faculty of English Language and Literature, University of Oxford.
Her research focuses on South African and world literature, confessional
narrative forms, the intersections between law and literature, and literature
and other art forms. She has published several articles on J.M.Coetzee,
and is completing a monograph on Coetzee and confession.


Claire Westall is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of English and Related
Literature at the University of York. Her forthcoming book is The
Rites of Cricket and Caribbean Literature. She is also co-author of The
Public on the Public (2015), and co-editor of both Cross-Gendered Literary
Voices (2012) and Literature of an Independent England (2013).

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