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Prisoners --- Prisoners as artists --- Prisonniers --- Artistes prisonniers --- Education --- Recreation --- Loisirs
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Based on conversations with artists, including people in prison or who were once imprisoned. It charts the importance of creative activity as an instrument of personal change.
Prisoners as artists. --- Artists. --- Persons --- Artists --- Art in prisons
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Arts in prisons --- Prisoners as artists --- Art --- Study and teaching
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Arts in prisons --- Prisoners as artists --- Art --- Study and teaching
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Approaching the prison as a creative environment and imprisoned officials as creative subjects in Ming China (1368-1644), Ying Zhang introduces important themes at the intersection of premodern Chinese religion, poetry, and visual and material culture. The Ming is known for its extraordinary cultural and economic accomplishments in the increasingly globalized early modern world. For scholars of Chinese religion and art, this era crystalizes the essential and enduring characteristics in these two spheres. Drawing on scholarship on Chinese philosophy, religion, aesthetics, poetry, music, and visual and material culture, Zhang illustrates how the prisoners understood their environment as creative and engaged it creatively. She then offers a literature survey on the characteristics of premodern Chinese religion and art that helps situate the questions of "creative environment" and "creative subject" within multiple fields of scholarship.
Art and religion --- Art and religion. --- Art, Chinese --- Prisoners as artists --- Prisoners as artists. --- Prisoners as authors --- Prisoners as authors. --- History --- Ming-Qing dynasties. --- 1368-1912. --- China.
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Prisons are an invisible, but dominant, part of American society: the United States incarcerates more people than any other nation in the world. In Michigan, the number of prisoners rose from 3,000 in 1970 to more than 50,000 by 2008, a shift that Buzz Alexander witnessed firsthand when he came to teach at the University of Michigan. Is William Martinez Not Our Brother? describes the University of Michigan's Prison Creative Arts Project (PCAP), a pioneering program founded in 1990 that provides university courses, a nonprofit organization, and a national network for incarcerated youth and adults in Michigan juvenile facilities and prisons. By giving incarcerated individuals an opportunity to participate in the arts, PCAP enables them to withstand and often overcome the conditions and culture of prison, the policies of an incarcerating state, and the consequences of mass incarceration.
Arts in prisons --- Prisoners as artists --- Community arts projects --- Prisoners --- Education --- Prison Creative Arts Project --- History.
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Prisons are an invisible, but dominant, part of American society: the United States incarcerates more people than any other nation in the world. In Michigan, the number of prisoners rose from 3,000 in 1970 to more than 50,000 by 2008, a shift that Buzz Alexander witnessed firsthand when he came to teach at the University of Michigan. Is William Martinez Not Our Brother? describes the University of Michigan's Prison Creative Arts Project (PCAP), a pioneering program founded in 1990 that provides university courses, a nonprofit organization, and a national network for incarcerated youth and adults in Michigan juvenile facilities and prisons. By giving incarcerated individuals an opportunity to participate in the arts, PCAP enables them to withstand and often overcome the conditions and culture of prison, the policies of an incarcerating state, and the consequences of mass incarceration.
Arts in prisons --- Prisoners as artists --- Community arts projects --- Prisoners --- Education --- Prison Creative Arts Project --- History.
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Inquisition --- Graffiti --- Drawing, Italian --- Prisoners as artists --- Inquisition --- Graffiti --- Dessin italien --- Artistes prisonniers
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In the 1970's, while politicians and activists outside prisons debated the proper response to crime, incarcerated people helped shape those debates though a broad range of remarkable political and literary writings. Lee Bernstein explores the forces that sparked a dramatic ""prison art renaissance,"" shedding light on how incarcerated people produced powerful works of writing, performance, and visual art. These included everything from George Jackson's revolutionary Soledad Brother to Miguel Pinero's acclaimed off-Broadway play and Hollywood film Short Eyes. An extraordinary
Prisoners as artists --- Arts, American --- Arts --- Arts and society --- Political aspects --- History
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