Faculty First Year Seminars 191WG4 - Gender, Race, and Mass Incarce

Fall
2021
01
1.00
Laura Ciolkowski

TU 5:30PM 6:20PM

UMass Amherst
23595
Integ. Learning Center N255
lciolkowski@umass.edu
There are currently over 2 million people living in prisons and jails across the United States ? more incarcerated people per capita than any other country in the world.? What is the carceral state and how do particular gendered and racialized bodies get caught up in its logics?? How do gender, race, sexuality, and class shape systems of discipline, punishment, surveillance, and control?? What is ?anti-carceral feminism? and what are some of the abolitionist critiques of the prison industrial complex?? This course approaches the issue of mass incarceration through the lens of social justice feminism, gender and sexuality studies, and critical race theory.? An intersectional and deeply interdisciplinary exploration of carceral systems, the course draws on literature, film, history, social science, psychology, art and popular media to interrogate and explore the many dimensions of mass incarceration in the U.S.??

First-Year - Fresh/Soph

Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.