Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Table
- Notes on the Authors
- Acknowledgements
- Foreword
- Introduction
- 1 Hearing the Voices of Women Involved in Drugs and Crime
- 2 Knifing Off? The Inadequacies of Desistance Frameworks for Women in the Criminal Justice System in Ireland
- 3 Sex Work, Criminalisation and Stigma: Towards a Feminist Criminological Imagination
- 4 Criminal Women in Prison Who Self-harm: What Can We Learn from Their Experiences?
- 5 Criminal Mothers: The Persisting Pains of Maternal Imprisonment
- 6 ‘The World Split Open’: Writing, Teaching and Learning with Women in Prison
- 7 Women’s Biographies through Prison
- Afterword
- Index
6 - ‘The World Split Open’: Writing, Teaching and Learning with Women in Prison
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Table
- Notes on the Authors
- Acknowledgements
- Foreword
- Introduction
- 1 Hearing the Voices of Women Involved in Drugs and Crime
- 2 Knifing Off? The Inadequacies of Desistance Frameworks for Women in the Criminal Justice System in Ireland
- 3 Sex Work, Criminalisation and Stigma: Towards a Feminist Criminological Imagination
- 4 Criminal Women in Prison Who Self-harm: What Can We Learn from Their Experiences?
- 5 Criminal Mothers: The Persisting Pains of Maternal Imprisonment
- 6 ‘The World Split Open’: Writing, Teaching and Learning with Women in Prison
- 7 Women’s Biographies through Prison
- Afterword
- Index
Summary
Verity-Fee, Phoenix, Iris and Angel are white, working-class women who are, or who have been, locked out of sight from society in a women's prison in England. They are just four of the women we have had the privilege of collaborating with over the past five years as part of the work we do delivering a prison education programme called the Inside-Out Prison Exchange Programme1. Our collaborative work and writing in this book is organised into two connected chapters. Chapter 6 is about context. Drawing on our experiences of writing, teaching and learning with women in prison, this chapter outlines the prison-based teaching programme that brought us together and explores our theoretical and conceptual approach. Much of our thinking about the punishment of women and prisons is born out of our many conversations with incarcerated women who have taken part in classes or with whom we have worked over the years. In Chapter 7, we go on to provide a critical reflection of our varied epistemologies on the imprisonment of women. We make no excuses for writing in an emotive way, and, in places, exposing our ‘uncomfortable’ and contradictory perspectives. On the contrary – this is first and foremost a feminist project and as such we celebrate subjectivity and individual experience (Reinharz, 1992), which are particularly impossible to ignore in a prison environment (Liebling, 1999). Chapter 7, is also co-authored with Verity-Fee, Phoenix, Iris and Angel but their names appear before ours in the authorship order, partly because their writings and prison journeys take centre stage. Through their poetry and creative writing, the chapter that follows provides a platform for their voices and complex experiences to be heard. We include short biographies as a way to contextualise their written pieces, which, when read together, we hope conveys a sense of their journey through prison.
We came to know each other through the Inside-Out Prison Exchange Programme, a prison-based education programme that brings academics and outside university students into prison to learn alongside, and as equals with, women and men detained inside prison. We provide and draw upon a range of texts as part of the programme.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Criminal WomenGender Matters, pp. 132 - 148Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2022