Precarious Citizenship: Ambivalence, Literacy, and Prisoner Reentry

Maggie Shelledy The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley

Abstract

Precarious Citizenship: Ambivalence, Literacy and Prisoner Reentry examines the role of literacy in the experiences of formerly incarcerated people as they navigate the process of reentry into mainstream citizenry. I argue that the unsustainability of mass incarceration has created uncertainty about the place of formerly incarcerated people in the democratic imaginary, opening for debate who deserves to participate in civic life. In response, higher education is increasingly being called upon to address the precarious citizenship of formerly incarcerated people and, I argue, serves to credential formerly incarcerated people not only for future employment but for inclusion in social life. The literacy narratives these individuals tell, however, are marked by an ambivalence toward the power of literacy as a mechanism for inclusion, as well as an ambivalence toward mainstream inclusion itself.

Journal
Literacy in Composition Studies
Published
2023-05-17
DOI
10.21623/1.10.2.4
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References (2)

  1. Adkins, Tabetha. "Literacy As a Legislative and Judicial Trope." Literacy in Composition Studies, vol. 2, no.…
  2. or, The Fight Against Public Fear, Private Benefits, and Prison Expansion." Challenging the Prison-Industrial…