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This Author: Lisa M. Corrigan
This Narrator: Winston Douglas
This Publisher: University Press Audiobooks

Prison Power by Lisa M. Corrigan

Prison Power

How Prison Influenced the Movement for Black Liberation

by Lisa M. Corrigan


Title Details

Narrator
 
Unabridged Edition
Running Time
8 Hrs. 33 Min.
Year Released
2018

Description

In the black liberation movement, imprisonment emerged as a key rhetorical, theoretical, and media resource. Imprisoned activists developed tactics and ideology to counter white supremacy. Lisa M. Corrigan underscores how imprisonment - a site for both political and personal transformation - shaped movement leaders by influencing their political analysis and organizational strategies. Prison became the critical space for the transformation from civil rights to Black Power, especially as southern civil rights activists faced setbacks.

Black Power activists produced autobiographical writings, essays, and letters about and from prison beginning with the early sit-in movement. Examining the iconic prison autobiographies of H. Rap Brown, Mumia Abu-Jamal, and Assata Shakur, Corrigan conducts rhetorical analyses of these extremely popular though understudied accounts of the Black Power movement.

Through prison writings, these activists deployed narrative features supporting certain tenets of Black Power, pride in blackness, disavowal of nonviolence, identification with the Third World, and identity strategies focused on black masculinity. Corrigan fills gaps between Black Power historiography and prison studies by scrutinizing the rhetorical forms and strategies of the Black Power ideology that arose from prison politics. These discourses demonstrate how Black Power activism shifted its tactics to regenerate, even after the FBI sought to disrupt, discredit, and destroy the movement.

Published by University Press of Mississippi.

"Prison Power is absolutely essential reading." - Karma R. Chavez, University of Texas, Austin

"A superb job of outlining the interplay between incarceration and the Black Power movement...should be read by those interested in the civil rights movement, social protest, vernacular language, and writings from prison." - Richard J. Jensen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas


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