ArticleDrawing on a set of first-hand written accounts of imprisonment, this article begins to open up the complexity of prison ‘soundscapes’ from the perspective of prisoners (Schafer 1977). The accounts suggest that in many respects prisoners are a ‘captive audience’ to the sonic environment in which they are held (Jewkes 2007; Kittay 2008; Kutzler 2014). They are subjected to a variety of sounds that they have limited capacity to avoid or control. But prisoners are not entirely deprived of ‘acoustical agency’. The sources indicate that prisoners actively draw on listening and sound-making in a diversity of ways as they negotiate prison life (Cusick 2013, 288). For instance, they may be alert to the sonic presences of prison staff and oth...
Luke Windsor explores the use of forced listening to music in detention and interrogation and points...
This article describes the precarious and sensitive relationship prisoners have with television; it ...
The prison is a peculiarly abstracted space which inhabits society's collective conscience. Yet with...
Music holds an ambivalent and integral character within the collective lives of prisoners, providing...
This article examines the ways in which music making can inspire and facilitate social change among...
Post 9/11 the ‘invisibility’ of political prisoners as part of the ‘war on terror’ has had a direct ...
Sound files to accompany thesis. The project sought to explore the significance of sound to the rela...
Post 9/11 the ‘invisibility’ of political prisoners as part of the ‘war on terror’ has had a direct ...
Post 9/11 the ‘invisibility’ of political prisoners as part of the ‘war on terror’ has had a direct ...
Carceral sites are forms of institutional of power. Τhey are also sites of many struggles. In such s...
Problems experienced by individuals in institutions tend to be hidden from the public gaze. This is...
Contrary to descriptions of a desensitising situation – with restrictions on movement, monotonous r...
This article examines the results of a research project we conducted on social uses of radio in the ...
(Excerpt) This Article proceeds in three Parts. Part I describes the deferential Turner standard tha...
Culturally and linguistically Deaf people experience disproportionate suffering and deprivation in p...
Luke Windsor explores the use of forced listening to music in detention and interrogation and points...
This article describes the precarious and sensitive relationship prisoners have with television; it ...
The prison is a peculiarly abstracted space which inhabits society's collective conscience. Yet with...
Music holds an ambivalent and integral character within the collective lives of prisoners, providing...
This article examines the ways in which music making can inspire and facilitate social change among...
Post 9/11 the ‘invisibility’ of political prisoners as part of the ‘war on terror’ has had a direct ...
Sound files to accompany thesis. The project sought to explore the significance of sound to the rela...
Post 9/11 the ‘invisibility’ of political prisoners as part of the ‘war on terror’ has had a direct ...
Post 9/11 the ‘invisibility’ of political prisoners as part of the ‘war on terror’ has had a direct ...
Carceral sites are forms of institutional of power. Τhey are also sites of many struggles. In such s...
Problems experienced by individuals in institutions tend to be hidden from the public gaze. This is...
Contrary to descriptions of a desensitising situation – with restrictions on movement, monotonous r...
This article examines the results of a research project we conducted on social uses of radio in the ...
(Excerpt) This Article proceeds in three Parts. Part I describes the deferential Turner standard tha...
Culturally and linguistically Deaf people experience disproportionate suffering and deprivation in p...
Luke Windsor explores the use of forced listening to music in detention and interrogation and points...
This article describes the precarious and sensitive relationship prisoners have with television; it ...
The prison is a peculiarly abstracted space which inhabits society's collective conscience. Yet with...