Identities, Education and Reentry: Performative Spaces and Enclosures

This is part one of a two-part interdisciplinary paper that examines the various forces (discourses and institutional processes) that shape prisoner-student identities. Discourses of officers from a correctional website serve as a limited, single case study of discourses that ascribe dehumanized, st...

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Main Author: Randall Wright
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: VCU Libraries 2014-10-01
Series:Journal of Prison Education and Reentry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jper.uib.no/index.php/jper/article/view/609
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spelling doaj-aabb91df5ef84abcb62897a63470c2212020-11-25T03:05:33ZengVCU LibrariesJournal of Prison Education and Reentry2387-23062014-10-0111324110.15845/jper.v1i1.609417Identities, Education and Reentry: Performative Spaces and EnclosuresRandall Wright0California State University, San BernardinoThis is part one of a two-part interdisciplinary paper that examines the various forces (discourses and institutional processes) that shape prisoner-student identities. Discourses of officers from a correctional website serve as a limited, single case study of discourses that ascribe dehumanized, stigmatized identities to "the prisoner." Two critical concepts, performative spaces and identity enclosures, are purposed as potential critical, emancipatory terms to explore the prisoner-student identity work that occurs in schools and elsewhere in prison. This paper is guided by the effort to assist teachers to act as transformative intellectuals in prisons and closed-custody settings by becoming more aware of the multilayered contexts--the politics of location--that undergird their work. Seeing the "bigger picture" has implications for how and what educators teach in prison settings and, perhaps, why education works to facilitate reentry. This paper is grounded in normalization theory. Normalization theorists believe prisons can facilitate reentry when they mirror important dimensions of outside life. The performance of multiple, contextualized identities, considered here and examined in more detail in a forthcoming article, serves as an example of how educators mirror "normal" life by facilitating the performance of different roles for prisoners on the inside.https://jper.uib.no/index.php/jper/article/view/609Discourseidentity enclosuresinstitutionalizationperformative spacesprisonizationnormalizationlabeling theoryeducation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Randall Wright
spellingShingle Randall Wright
Identities, Education and Reentry: Performative Spaces and Enclosures
Journal of Prison Education and Reentry
Discourse
identity enclosures
institutionalization
performative spaces
prisonization
normalization
labeling theory
education
author_facet Randall Wright
author_sort Randall Wright
title Identities, Education and Reentry: Performative Spaces and Enclosures
title_short Identities, Education and Reentry: Performative Spaces and Enclosures
title_full Identities, Education and Reentry: Performative Spaces and Enclosures
title_fullStr Identities, Education and Reentry: Performative Spaces and Enclosures
title_full_unstemmed Identities, Education and Reentry: Performative Spaces and Enclosures
title_sort identities, education and reentry: performative spaces and enclosures
publisher VCU Libraries
series Journal of Prison Education and Reentry
issn 2387-2306
publishDate 2014-10-01
description This is part one of a two-part interdisciplinary paper that examines the various forces (discourses and institutional processes) that shape prisoner-student identities. Discourses of officers from a correctional website serve as a limited, single case study of discourses that ascribe dehumanized, stigmatized identities to "the prisoner." Two critical concepts, performative spaces and identity enclosures, are purposed as potential critical, emancipatory terms to explore the prisoner-student identity work that occurs in schools and elsewhere in prison. This paper is guided by the effort to assist teachers to act as transformative intellectuals in prisons and closed-custody settings by becoming more aware of the multilayered contexts--the politics of location--that undergird their work. Seeing the "bigger picture" has implications for how and what educators teach in prison settings and, perhaps, why education works to facilitate reentry. This paper is grounded in normalization theory. Normalization theorists believe prisons can facilitate reentry when they mirror important dimensions of outside life. The performance of multiple, contextualized identities, considered here and examined in more detail in a forthcoming article, serves as an example of how educators mirror "normal" life by facilitating the performance of different roles for prisoners on the inside.
topic Discourse
identity enclosures
institutionalization
performative spaces
prisonization
normalization
labeling theory
education
url https://jper.uib.no/index.php/jper/article/view/609
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