Carceral Geography Quotes
Carceral Geography: Spaces and practices of incarceration
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Dominique Moran6 ratings, 4.67 average rating, 1 review
Carceral Geography Quotes
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“Hoelscher and Alderman (2004: 350) argued that elites ‘often make or preserve … landscapes as a way to bolster a particular political order, and as a means to capital accumulation’, and Bruggeman’s (2012) analysis of the processes and circumstances behind the conservation of Eastern State Penitentiary suggests that the action of local elites in this case also (perhaps unwittingly) performed this function. Observing that ‘museums are branded by the moment in which they are born’, and that they ‘carry with them the politics of those who shape their public roles’ (ibid. 174), he noted that the committee of volunteers which formed to preserve the Penitentiary reflected the ‘young, highly educated and predominantly white culture activists’ (ibid. 177) who inhabited the newly gentrified local neighbourhood around the prison, and who had few connections either to prisoners who”
― Carceral Geography: Spaces and Practices of Incarceration
― Carceral Geography: Spaces and Practices of Incarceration
