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Illiterate Inmates: Educating Criminals in Nineteenth Century England

Autor Rosalind Crone
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 12 mai 2022
The nineteenth-century prison, we have been told, was a place of 'hard labour, hard board, and hard fare'. Yet it was also a place of education. Schemes to teach prisoners to read and write, and sometimes more besides, can be traced to the early 1800s. State-funded elementary education for prisoners pre-dated universal and compulsory education for children by fifty years. In the 1860s, when the famous maxim, just cited, became the basis of national penal policy, arithmetic was included by legislators alongside reading and writing as a core skill to be taught in English prisons. By c.1880 every prison in England used to accommodate those convicted of criminal offences had a formal education programme in which the 3Rs - reading, writing, and arithmetic - were taught, to males and females, adults and children alike. Not every programme, however, had prisoners enrolled in it.Illiterate Inmates tells the story of the emergence, at the turn of the nineteenth century, of a powerful idea - the provision of education in prisons for those accused and convicted of crime - and its execution over the century that followed. Using evidence from both local and convict prisons, the study shows how education became part of the modern penal regime. While the curriculum largely reflected that of mainstream elementary schools, the delivery of education, shaped by the penal environment, created an entirely different educational experience. At the same time, philosophies of imprisonment which prioritised punishment and deterrence over reformation undermined any socially reconstructive ambitions. Thus the period between 1800 and 1899 witnessed the rise and fall of the prison school in England.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780198833833
ISBN-10: 0198833830
Pagini: 452
Ilustrații: 54 black and white figures/charts
Dimensiuni: 165 x 240 x 29 mm
Greutate: 0.83 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Recenzii

The book is a wealth of comprehensive research with a substantial number of areas of interest to family and community historians as well as to those with general interest in social history.
The amount of research that has fed into this book is indeed impressive; the wealth of data - some of which is presented in extensive appendices at the back of the volume - will be an essential resource for anybody studying penal and educational history for years to come.
Ultimately it is these vivid examples, along with the meticulous footnotes, charts and tables, primary sources such as prison inspector reports, as well as detailed appendices,that render this an indispensable volume. The book's geographical boundaries make sense, and yet the mentions of Irish prisons, references to prisoner transportation, andfascinating material on women prisoners invite other scholars potentially to expand on this exciting research. In this invaluable contribution to the history of education in the nineteenth century, we are haunted by the past and also by the challenges that persist-as today's prisoners remind us-in the present.
Crone has written an impressively researched, nuanced, and well-argued book thatdeserves to be read widely and should be essential reading for historians of education and those interested in penal history. Victorianists and social historians will also find in it much that is worthwhile. The book's eclectic visual sources, including images of prison registers and classrooms, enliven its often-hefty empirical analysis and textual thickets, while offering the reader a more vivid understanding of the topic. The copious notes and tables in the book's appendices amount to an invaluable resource and reference guide that will be of interest to both scholars and students wishing to research this topic further.

Notă biografică

Rosalind Crone is senior lecturer in history at The Open University, author of Violent Victorians (2012) and has written on nineteenth-century popular culture, the history of reading, literacy and education, and the history of prisons. She is Director of the Open University's Centre for the History of Crime, Policing, and Justice and project lead for prisonhistory.org.