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Prisons That Could Not Hold

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230 page paperback. Prison notes 1964-Seneca 1984. Collection of essays from prison by the radical activist Barbara Deming.

230 pages, Paperback

First published June 1, 1985

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About the author

Barbara Deming

25 books18 followers
Barbara Deming (July 23, 1917 – August 2, 1984) was an American feminist and advocate of nonviolent social change.

arbara Deming was born in New York City. She attended a Friends (Quaker) school up through her high school years.

Deming directed plays, taught dramatic literature and wrote and published fiction and non-fiction works. On a trip to India, she began reading Gandhi, and became committed to a non-violent struggle, with her main cause being Women's Rights. She later became a journalist, and was active in many demonstrations and marches over issues of peace and civil rights. She was a member of a group that went to Hanoi during the Vietnam War, and was jailed many times for non-violent protest.

In 1975, Deming founded The Money for Women Fund to support the work of feminist artists. Deming helped administer the Fund, with support from artist Mary Meigs. After Deming's death in 1984, the organization was renamed as The Barbara Deming Memorial Fund.[5] Today, the foundation is "oldest ongoing feminist granting agency" which "gives encouragement and grants to individual feminists in the arts (writers, and visual artists)"

(from Wikipedia)

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Victoria Law.
Author 13 books298 followers
December 16, 2011
Given all the hoopla that occurs in the activist world every time an #OWS arrest happens (and all the outrage over jail conditions that the protesters (but not all the rest of the people in the jail) have to endure), I thought I'd finally dust this off my to-be-read pile. Deming and the women in jail with her in 1964 came out with a very different view of prisons than what I'm seeing from the #OWS arrestees today. In 1964, one of Deming's cellmates wrote, "...the court, as now constituted, would be meaningless without the jail which gives it its power. But if there is anything I have learned by being in jail, it is that prisons are wrong, simply and unqualifiedly wrong..."
Profile Image for Geoffrey Bateman.
315 reviews2 followers
July 10, 2014
I'm doing research for a paper and ideally an essay on Deming, and having read a few of her essays for a class I teach on nonviolence, wanted to go back to some of her earlier work and activism. This book is beautiful--especially the first part, "Prison Notes," which takes up most of the volume. It chronicles Deming's participation in a peace walk in 1964 from Quebec to Guantanamo (she didn't walk all of it), in which she was arrested and spent nearly a month in jail in Albany, Georgia. It's a harrowing, beautiful, and hopeful account of her commitment to nonviolence, the experience of going to jail for one's conscience and commitments, and reflections on the connections between the anti-war/peace movement and the fight for racial justice. Note to self: I would strongly consider using this book (or certainly parts of it) for PJ 400.
Profile Image for Marlee.
2,017 reviews
September 24, 2012
This book was different from most of the books I normally read. It took me longer to get through than many of the other books I've read. It was an interesting book though, and presented in a way that I found captivating.
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