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The Real Cost Of Prisons Comix (PM Press)
 
 
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The Real Cost Of Prisons Comix (PM Press) [Paperback]

Lois Ahrens (Editor), Craig Gilmore (Preface)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

PM Press September 26, 2008
One out of every hundred adults in the U.S. is in prison. This book provides a crash course in what drives mass incarceration, the human and community costs, and how to stop the numbers from going even higher. This volume collects the three comic books published by the Real Cost of Prisons Project. The stories and statistical information in each comic book is thoroughly researched and documented.





Prison Town: Paying the Price tells the story of how the financing and site locations of prisons affects the people of rural communities in which prison are built. It also tells the story of how mass incarceration affects people of urban communities where the majority of incarcerated people come from.





Prisoners of the War on Drugs includes the history of the war on drugs, mandatory minimums, how racism creates harsher sentences for people of color, stories on how the war on drugs works against women, three strikes laws, obstacles to coming home after incarceration, and how mass incarceration destabilizes neighborhoods.





Prisoners of a Hard Life: Women and Their Children includes stories about women trapped by mandatory sentencing and the "costs" of incarceration for women and their families. Also included are alternatives to the present system, a glossary and footnotes.





Over 125,000 copies of the comic books have been printed and more than 75,000 have been sent to families of people who are incarcerated, people who are incarcerated and to organizers and activists throughout the country. The demand for them is constant and the ways in which they are being used is inspiring.

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The Real Cost Of Prisons Comix (PM Press) + The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness
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Editorial Reviews

Review

The comic-book form has been transformed into an incisive visual blade, slicing through the haze of mainstream misinformation about prisons to expose the true costs of the U.S. maintaining the largest and most expensive prison system in the world. --Josh MacPhee, Justseeds

There cannot be a prison-building moratorium or abolition movement without a voice advocating in such a way that reaches those most impacted by the system of incarceration. These comic books are that voice and an important contribution to that movement. --Jalil Muntaqim, political prisoner

I cannot think of a better way to arouse the public to the cruelties of the prison system than to make this book widely available. --Howard Zinn

Product Details

  • Paperback: 104 pages
  • Publisher: PM Press (September 26, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1604860340
  • ISBN-13: 978-1604860344
  • Product Dimensions: 9.9 x 6.5 x 0.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #158,401 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Sabrina Jones has been writing and illustrating comics since the Reagan era. As a young art student, she was alarmed by the threats to women's reproductive rights, and joined a group of pro-choice activist artists called Carnival Knowledge. Wanting to cover women's issues in World War 3 Illustrated, editor Seth Tobocman convinced Sabrina to create her first comic strip. She has gone on to edit and contribute to many issues, including Bitchcraft, Female Complaints, and Life During Wartime.

In the 1990s she co-founded Girltalk, an anthology of women's autobiographical comics, published by Fantagraphics.

She has created nonfiction comics for Wobblies! A Graphic History of the Industrial Workers of the World, Verso, 2005; The Real Cost of Prisons Project, 2006; Mixed Signals, a counter-recruitment tool in comic book form, Studs Terkel's Working: A Graphic Adaptation, The New Press, 2009; and FDR and the New Deal for Beginners, 2010.
Her first complete book is Isadora Duncan, A Graphic Biography, Hill & Wang, 2008.
She is working on a graphic adaptation of Race to Incarcerate, by Marc Mauer and the Sentencing Project.

Born and raised in Philadelphia, Sabrina moved to New York to study painting at Pratt Institute, and later got an MFA from the School of Visual Arts. She now lives in Brooklyn with novelist Steve Stern, and two cats, Percy and Jezebel. She paints scenery for film, theater and television, as a member of United Scenic Artists Local 829.

 

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Lessons in the Real Cost of Prisons, December 3, 2008
This review is from: The Real Cost Of Prisons Comix (PM Press) (Paperback)
Lessons in the Real Cost of Prisons
By Jordan Beltran Gonzales

The Real Cost of Prisons Comix. Edited by Lois Ahrens, with comic art by Kevin Pyle, Sabrina Jones, and Susan Willmarth. Oakland: PM Press, 96pp, paperback, $12.95.

This anthology combines three engaging and educational comics with dozens of letters and testimonials from readers. These 100 pages yield a thorough breakdown of how America's economic and social addiction to imprisoning Black, Brown, and poor people for particular behaviors has spiraled into an epidemic of mass incarceration. Through vivid black-and-white images, well-researched background information, and case studies of women and men in context, readers gain vital knowledge and access to progressive networks that will transform this crisis.

Today, more than 2.3 million women and men are currently locked up, while more than 5 million people also endure state surveillance and many legal and social obstacles while on parole or probation. One of every 32 adults is in this matrix. One in five children of women who become incarcerated will directly witness their mother's arrest. Half of all women in prison are incarcerated more than 100 miles from their families. This book represents a struggle for our present and future generations.

To combat this hydra of race-based drug policies, greed and exploitation of prison towns, and the skyrocketing rates of incarceration of women, a coalition of writers and artists offer models of popular education and share their visions for drug treatment, harm reduction, and justice reinvestment. The task of critical storytelling and teaching about life-and-death issues is a careful balance, which the writers and artists achieve well. In each comic, readers find alternative solutions to prisons as we currently know them, learn about organizing successes, and gain feedback of how to teach teachers and how to train trainers.

Editor Lois Ahrens is also the founder and director of the Real Cost of Prisons Project, which creates popular educational materials by justice policy researchers, artists, and people directly experiencing the impact of mass incarceration. In the preface, Ahrens emphasizes this book's wide access and usefulness across all audiences. In fact, the comics are direct products of the Real Cost of Prisons Project educational workshops about public health, popular economics, and progressive reform and abolition. Potential readers span elementary schools through colleges, community-based organizations, medical and mental healthcare providers, legislators and voters, and people directly surviving inside.

In the introduction, Ruth Wilson Gilmore and Craig Gilmore compel readers to translate knowledge into action. This book helps us understand "how the system of mass incarceration permeates our lives, who is paying the costs of that system and the many ways the system is vulnerable to people who put their thought and effort into organizing to shrink it."

The first chapter, "Prison Town: Paying the Price," by Kevin Pyle and Craig Gilmore, explains the economic greed and political collusion inherent in the siting of prisons. Case studies across the U.S. reveal environmental injustices, racism in English-only and anti-immigrant business and legal maneuvers, and the destruction of local economies, all stemming from prison towns' misnamed "community development projects." Following this chapter are eye-opening testimonials, in which one program director applauds this comic through "the complexity that is rendered through a few deceptively simple strokes of a pen."

In "Prisoners of the War on Drugs," Sabrina Jones, Ellen Miller-Mack, and Lois Ahrens highlight the relationships across drug policies, perceptions of race, class, and criminality, and, after incarceration, limited access to social services and educational opportunities. Five case studies present an individual person's life context for a momentary decision. This context is necessary for readers to understand the persistence of institutional racism and barriers for people of color and, in particular, women and mothers. Alternatives to New York's Rockefeller Drug Laws and California's Three Strikes Law include programs in harm reduction, which reduce the harmful effects of drug use on families, and justice reinvestment, which supports jobs, housing, quality schools, and youth programs.

The final chapter, "Prisoners of a Hard Life: Women and Their Children," by Susan Willmarth, Ellen Miller-Mack, and Lois Ahrens, exposes the subjective and violent enforcement of drug laws against women, specifically low-income women of color. Five individual women's stories show how poverty, access to life chances, police targeting, and court sentencing have usurped hundreds of thousands of women's reproductive rights. This comic's closing pages feature excellent alternatives to jail through the theme "Change Is Possible."

As an instructor of Ethnic Studies College Writing, I attest to the effectiveness of these comics. To teach my high school students about the prison industrial complex and the built-in tracking in our high school to college pipeline, I have challenged students to teach each other key themes and terms from the comics. Their group presentations were phenomenal, and far more impressive than my typical college students' work! They took ownership of teaching the process of recidivism and the injustice of mandatory minimum sentences, and they identified their agency and social responsibility to affect this same system that is targeting our low-income communities of color.

My students have often told me that they have felt validated and affirmed to finally identify a concept, a theory, and a learning style that is relevant to their life experiences. These comics urge us to remember that we are not alone, either in our struggle or in our imagination for something better. Teaching with the Real Cost of Prisons Comix has been one of the most meaningful experiences I have had as an educator. I absolutely recommend this book as an assigned text in courses that bridge issues of media, American Studies, social justice, critical thinking, educational inequities, and the cross-cutting themes of gender, race, and class. Our potential for learning is limitless, and there is no time more urgent than now.

Jordan Beltran Gonzales is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Ethnic Studies at UC Berkeley. He teaches courses in critical thinking, U.S. counter-history, research methods, and academic survival with high school and college students. He believes in justice through education, home-cooked food, and live music. Your words are welcomed at jgonzo@berkeley.edu
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
prison economy, prison town, revenue bonds, mass incarceration
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
The Real Cost of Prisons Project, Rural America, Tracy Huling, Peter Wagner, Justice Reinvestment, The Prison Index, Dina Rose, United States, Open Society, Todd Clear, Lois Ahrens, Christopher Couch, Families Against Mandatory Minimums, Prisoners of the War, Marc Mauer, All Rights Reserved, Malcolm Young, James Heinz, Eric Cadora, Growth Industry, The Sentencing Project
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Surprise Me!
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