Food as a Mechanism of Control and Resistance in Jails and Prisons

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A01=Salvador Jimenez Murguia
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Author_Salvador Jimenez Murguia
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correctional facility policy
corrections
criminal justice system
criminology
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food
Food control
food in jail
food in prison
foodways
jail food
Joe Apaio
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penology
politics of incarceration
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prison food
prison industrial complex
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Product details

  • ISBN 9781498573108
  • Weight: 204g
  • Dimensions: 155 x 231mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Aug 2020
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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Murguia explores food and foodways within institutions of incarceration. Food, like all resources within total institutions, is vulnerable to social manipulation. Within jail and prison settings, food becomes both a mechanism of control and resistance. In the former, the type of food, its quality, its quantity, and the symbolic significance of its presence or absence all contribute to the socio-political experience of the incarcerated—perhaps even adding an extra form of punishment to one’s sentence not measured in time, but rather in terms of cruelty. In the latter, the incarcerated may view the preparation of food, the innovation it may undergo, its consumption, or even the refusal of its consumption along these same socio-political lines. Thus viewing food within jail and prison as social facts that engender real consequences reveals a virtually uncharted area of research for understanding the intersection between food and life within the confines of incarceration.
Of this line of inquiry, Murguia asks how food is employed as a means to control prisoners and, conversely, how do prisoners employ food in the service of resistance. As his analysis suggests, this text emphasizes a need to advance a broader discussion about the diets of prisoners.

Salvador Jimenez Murguía is professor of sociology at Akita International University.

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