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
7 - Women’s Biographies through 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
Four incarcerated women were involved in the project. They are each strong, kind and thoughtful and, like all of us, have flaws (Fine and Torre, 2006). After several years delivering prison education and working within the prison estate, we have learned not to judge or romanticise the women we work with. We understand that some people detained in prison have committed serious crimes. However, we approach our work with a strong sense of humanity, of seeing the humanity in all of us. We also approach our work from the standpoint that people, no matter who they are, should not be defined by the worst thing they have done in their lives. The Inside-Out programme focuses on mutual engagement, learning through dialogue and critical thinking. Inside-Out does not ‘research’ or objectify the inside students who participate in the programme and does not scrutinise their individual offences. All students are known only by a first name or chosen nickname and past offences – of inside or, for that matter, outside students – are not known to the class. Similarly, the Inside-Out Think Tank members that we write with here are serving diverse sentences for diverse offences, but the specifics of those offences are unimportant and not the focus of our work together.
Through a process of working and writing together, the women originally wrote their contributions as part of the ‘World Split Open’ creative writing project discussed in Chapter 6. However, we have continued to work together since, and during that time have been privy to their experiences within, journeys through, and for one of the women, out of the prison system. We revisited these writings with them and asked them to reflect on who they felt they were at the time of writing, how they feel about that writing now and who they are today. Verity-Fee, Phoenix, Iris and Angel have all contributed to, read and given feedback on this chapter, providing us with the details they wanted including or omitting from their biographies. Two of the women wanted to choose their own pseudonym.
Key themes run through the writing. Given the structural violence inflicted upon women outside and inside prison, outlined in Chapter 6, it is perhaps unsurprising that each of the women represented in this chapter have experienced violence and abuse at some point in their lives and are all from white working-class backgrounds.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Criminal WomenGender Matters, pp. 149 - 172Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2022