Book Cover

Ecologies of Incarceration: Carceral Discard Studies in the Anthropocene

Contributor(s): Tahat, Mauve Perle (Author), Vakoch, Douglas A (Editor)

ISBN: 9781666964011

Publisher: Lexington Books

Hardcover
$115.00
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Pub Date: December 15, 2024

Dewey: 810.9920692

LCCN: 2024039870

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Dust Cover, Illustrated, Index

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.75" H x 9.00" L x 6.00" W ( 1.16 lbs) 276 pages

Series: Ecocritical Theory and Practice

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: This book offers an exploration of the intersections between carceral systems, environmental concerns, and political ideologies. It examines how prison literature and narrative witness reveal the complexities of our contemporary world, shedding light on the systemic issues that link environmental degradation with carceral practices.

Brief description: Douglas A. Vakoch is president of METI, dedicated to Messaging Extraterrestrial Intelligence and sustaining civilization on multigenerational timescales. As director of Green Psychotherapy, PC, he helps alleviate environmental distress through ecotherapy.

Review Quotes:

"Mauve Perle Tahat has done that rare, but always welcomed, feat of writing a book that is brilliant in different keys. This is a book that students, scholars, and general readers can pick up and engage with on multiple levels. Her focus on carceral systems, environmental studies, and political power results in a winding, multi-disciplinary exploration of racial capitalism, the Anthropocene, and prison literature. As she states, "Every supremacy is a flawed supremacy." The only way we can achieve a more liberated future is by close examination of our built and shared environment along with a serious inventory of the cultural baggage we continue to reproduce in thought and action. "I've consistently asked, and maybe you have too: what has the human impact been [of the Anthropocene]? And this is where we can talk to ghosts." Tahat shows us that although much of society would have us disregard people, places, and objects as "waste" or "trash," it is in this dialogue with refuse where we will find our emancipation."

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