美国监狱中的音乐创作:Mary L. Cohen 和 Stuart P. Duncan 合著的《聆听被监禁者的声音》(评论)

IF 0.8 3区 社会学 Q3 POLITICAL SCIENCE Human Rights Quarterly Pub Date : 2024-07-26 DOI:10.1353/hrq.2024.a933878
Brianna J. Suslovic
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The authors of <em>Music Making in U.S. Prisons</em> provide a well-researched and empirically grounded case for expanding music-making programming in prisons across the U.S., applying a critical lens to the criminal-legal system and the experiences of incarcerated individuals entangled within it.</p> <p>This book is speaking to the canon of prison-critical authors in the past half-century, including Angela Davis (<em>Are Prisons Obsolete?</em>) and Ruth Wilson Gilmore (<em>Abolition Geography</em>). The authors, Mary L. Cohen and Stuart P. Duncan, primarily argue that music-making in and around U.S. prisons has a role to play in dismantling the prison industrial complex.<sup>1</sup> They consider music making as a pathway to self-knowledge, relational skills development with outside individuals, healthy collaboration, and skill-based learning, noting the value of this multifunctionality throughout their writing. Through engagement with abolitionist thinkers such as Mariame Kaba,<sup>2</sup> the authors offer several case studies of the liberatory potential of various types of music programs in carceral settings, ranging from music collaborations in juvenile detention centers to songwriting workshops in maximum security prisons. Their discussion of the geneses and outcomes of instrumental, choral, and songwriting spaces in carceral settings is informed by a critical historical perspective about the development of music ensembles in prisons and jails over the past century.</p> <p>In her analysis of a workshop in a Raleigh, North Carolina prison, Ashley Lucas writes about the way in which <strong>[End Page 552]</strong> many incarcerated individuals “are often characterized as the objects of their own art rather than the agents who created it.”<sup>3</sup> When creative work produced by incarcerated artists is consumed outside of prison walls, there runs a substantial risk of dehumanization and stereotyping. Incarcerated artists are expected to fit their creative work into a life narrative of trauma, deviancy, and repentance, which reduces their art to a means of constructing flattening rehabilitation narratives.<sup>4</sup> Instead, of falling prey to this trope, the authors of <em>Music Making in U.S. Prisons</em> opt for a more nuanced perspective on the role and function of music programming for incarcerated individuals. Cohen and Duncan, both music educators with experience teaching in carceral settings, ground their analyses in their own work, and in the perspectives shared with them by incarcerated music-makers themselves. This on-the-ground approach lends credibility and rigor to their argument.</p> <p>Cohen and Duncan begin their book with a justification, explaining why music making is a unique and worthwhile object of study for individuals invested in dismantling the U.S. carceral system. They situate their discussion with an acknowledgment that arts and social service program funding has been substantially cut in most correctional institutions in the U.S., and that the rise of mass incarceration has led to a decline in program availability for incarcerated individuals.<sup>5</sup> From this vantage point, they make the case that music making in prisons can function as a pathway to build bridges between incarcerated communities and their counterparts on the outside. They further argue that healing justice and restorative justice approaches are needed in the U.S. criminal legal system, and that music making creates opportunities for relationality and care that bring the entire system closer to a less-punitive approach.</p> <p>In their second chapter, Cohen and Duncan take a historical approach to the phenomenon of music in prisons across the U.S. They shed light on little-known cases of successful music ensembles comprised of incarcerated artists, highlighting the creativity and strategy required of music educators, facilitators, and conductors as they developed prison brass bands, choirs, radio programs, blues groups, glee clubs, and orchestras. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者 美国监狱中的音乐创作:Mary L. Cohen & Stuart P. Duncan 著,《聆听被监禁者的声音》(Music Making in U.S. Prisons:聆听被监禁者的声音》(Wilfred Laurier University Press 2022 年),ISBN 9781771125710,223 页。在美国监狱中开展以艺术为基础的活动,可以作为对被监禁者的康复干预,也可以作为人权干预,促进美国一些最受鄙视和社会孤立的人的尊严和价值。美国监狱中的音乐创作》一书的作者为在全美监狱中推广音乐创作计划提供了一个经过充分研究并以经验为基础的案例,并对刑事法律制度以及被卷入其中的被监禁者的经历进行了批判性的透视。本书是对过去半个世纪监狱批判作家作品的补充,包括安吉拉-戴维斯(Angela Davis)的《监狱过时了吗》(Are Prisons Obsolete?)作者玛丽-L-科恩(Mary L. Cohen)和斯图尔特-P-邓肯(Stuart P. Duncan)主要论证了美国监狱内外的音乐创作在拆除监狱工业综合体中的作用。1 他们认为音乐创作是认识自我、发展与外界的关系技能、健康合作和技能学习的途径,并在写作中始终注意到这种多功能性的价值。通过与废除奴隶制思想家玛丽亚姆-卡巴(Mariame Kaba)2 等人的交流,作者提供了多个案例研究,说明在监禁环境中各种类型的音乐项目所具有的解放潜力,从青少年拘留中心的音乐合作到最高戒备监狱中的歌曲创作研讨会,不一而足。他们在讨论监狱环境中器乐、合唱和歌曲创作空间的基因和成果时,以批判性的历史视角审视了过去一个世纪中监狱和看守所中音乐团体的发展。阿什利-卢卡斯(Ashley Lucas)在分析北卡罗来纳州罗利监狱的一个工作坊时写道,许多被监禁者 "往往被描述为他们自己艺术的对象,而不是创造艺术的主体"。4 《美国监狱中的音乐创作》一书的作者们并没有陷入这种窠臼,而是选择了一种更为细致入微的视角,来看待针对被监禁者的音乐节目的角色和功能。科恩和邓肯都是音乐教育家,拥有在监狱环境中教学的经验,他们的分析立足于自己的工作,以及被监禁的音乐制作者与他们分享的观点。这种实地考察的方法为他们的论点增添了可信度和严谨性。科恩和邓肯在书的开头提出了一个理由,解释了为什么音乐创作对于致力于拆除美国监禁系统的人来说是一个独特而值得研究的对象。他们在进行讨论时承认,美国大多数教养机构的艺术和社会服务项目资金已被大幅削减,大规模监禁的兴起导致了针对被监禁者的项目供应量的下降。他们进一步指出,美国的刑事法律体系需要治疗性司法和恢复性司法方法,而音乐创作为关系性和关怀创造了机会,使整个体系更接近于减少惩罚的方法。在第二章中,科恩和邓肯从历史的角度探讨了美国监狱中的音乐现象。他们揭示了一些鲜为人知的由被监禁艺术家组成的成功音乐组合案例,强调了音乐教育者、指导者和指挥者在发展监狱铜管乐队、合唱团、广播节目、蓝调团体、欢乐俱乐部和管弦乐队时所需要的创造力和策略。鉴于制度上的限制...
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Music Making in U.S. Prisons: Listening to Incarcerated Voices by Mary L. Cohen and Stuart P. Duncan (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Music Making in U.S. Prisons: Listening to Incarcerated Voices by Mary L. Cohen and Stuart P. Duncan
  • Brianna J. Suslovic (bio)
Mary L. Cohen & Stuart P. Duncan, Music Making in U.S. Prisons: Listening to Incarcerated Voices (Wilfred Laurier University Press 2022), ISBN 9781771125710, 223 pages.

Arts-based programming in United States (U.S.) prisons can function as a rehabilitative intervention for incarcerated individuals, but it can also function as a human rights intervention, promoting the dignity and worth of some of the most stigmatized and socially isolated individuals in the country. The authors of Music Making in U.S. Prisons provide a well-researched and empirically grounded case for expanding music-making programming in prisons across the U.S., applying a critical lens to the criminal-legal system and the experiences of incarcerated individuals entangled within it.

This book is speaking to the canon of prison-critical authors in the past half-century, including Angela Davis (Are Prisons Obsolete?) and Ruth Wilson Gilmore (Abolition Geography). The authors, Mary L. Cohen and Stuart P. Duncan, primarily argue that music-making in and around U.S. prisons has a role to play in dismantling the prison industrial complex.1 They consider music making as a pathway to self-knowledge, relational skills development with outside individuals, healthy collaboration, and skill-based learning, noting the value of this multifunctionality throughout their writing. Through engagement with abolitionist thinkers such as Mariame Kaba,2 the authors offer several case studies of the liberatory potential of various types of music programs in carceral settings, ranging from music collaborations in juvenile detention centers to songwriting workshops in maximum security prisons. Their discussion of the geneses and outcomes of instrumental, choral, and songwriting spaces in carceral settings is informed by a critical historical perspective about the development of music ensembles in prisons and jails over the past century.

In her analysis of a workshop in a Raleigh, North Carolina prison, Ashley Lucas writes about the way in which [End Page 552] many incarcerated individuals “are often characterized as the objects of their own art rather than the agents who created it.”3 When creative work produced by incarcerated artists is consumed outside of prison walls, there runs a substantial risk of dehumanization and stereotyping. Incarcerated artists are expected to fit their creative work into a life narrative of trauma, deviancy, and repentance, which reduces their art to a means of constructing flattening rehabilitation narratives.4 Instead, of falling prey to this trope, the authors of Music Making in U.S. Prisons opt for a more nuanced perspective on the role and function of music programming for incarcerated individuals. Cohen and Duncan, both music educators with experience teaching in carceral settings, ground their analyses in their own work, and in the perspectives shared with them by incarcerated music-makers themselves. This on-the-ground approach lends credibility and rigor to their argument.

Cohen and Duncan begin their book with a justification, explaining why music making is a unique and worthwhile object of study for individuals invested in dismantling the U.S. carceral system. They situate their discussion with an acknowledgment that arts and social service program funding has been substantially cut in most correctional institutions in the U.S., and that the rise of mass incarceration has led to a decline in program availability for incarcerated individuals.5 From this vantage point, they make the case that music making in prisons can function as a pathway to build bridges between incarcerated communities and their counterparts on the outside. They further argue that healing justice and restorative justice approaches are needed in the U.S. criminal legal system, and that music making creates opportunities for relationality and care that bring the entire system closer to a less-punitive approach.

In their second chapter, Cohen and Duncan take a historical approach to the phenomenon of music in prisons across the U.S. They shed light on little-known cases of successful music ensembles comprised of incarcerated artists, highlighting the creativity and strategy required of music educators, facilitators, and conductors as they developed prison brass bands, choirs, radio programs, blues groups, glee clubs, and orchestras. Given the institutional constraints...

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来源期刊
CiteScore
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51
期刊介绍: Now entering its twenty-fifth year, Human Rights Quarterly is widely recognizedas the leader in the field of human rights. Articles written by experts from around the world and from a range of disciplines are edited to be understood by the intelligent reader. The Quarterly provides up-to-date information on important developments within the United Nations and regional human rights organizations, both governmental and non-governmental. It presents current work in human rights research and policy analysis, reviews of related books, and philosophical essays probing the fundamental nature of human rights as defined by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
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