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A Survey of the Representation of Prisoners in the United States Discipline and Photographs – The Prison Experience Reviews". . . a comprehensive view of prison photography in the United States from its nineteenth-century beginnings to the present, which is informed by contemporary critical theory, sociology, historical perspective and a sensitive knowledge of photographic art. Hugunin's multi-disciplinary approach, which is admirably unified by a subtle and nuanced analysis of the shifting boundaries between ‘outsiders' and ‘insiders' in the encounter between the photographer and the prison system, shows not only the complexities of prison photography as a genre, but the ways in which society more generally responds to the phenomenon of incarceration. Through precisely detailing the relation between photographers and subjects in a series of studies of the major bodies of work in prison photography, Hugunin reveals the strategies by which we understand and orient ourselves to those who have been set apart from and rejected by society." – Michael A. Weinstein Table of ContentsTable of Contents:
Illustrations; Foreword by Norval Morris; Author's Preface
Introduction: Punishment, The Terrible Solvent
1.Architecture Parlante and Homo Criminalis
2.An Era of Reform
3.The Crime of Punishment
4.McCune the Exceptional
5.Considered Photographs
6.Killing Time
7.Video Carceri
8.Doing Time/Doing Death
Conclusion: Empowering Narratives
Bibliography, Index
ISBN10: 0-7734-8152-4 ISBN13: 978-0-7734-8152-7 Pages: 544 Year: 1999
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