1st Edition

Jailhouse Journalism The Fourth Estate Behind Bars

By James McGrath Morris Copyright 2001
    270 Pages
    by Routledge

    270 Pages
    by Routledge

    In the 1980s alone, some 100 periodicals were published by and for inmates of America's prisons. Unlike their peers who passed their sentences stamping out licence plates, these convicts spent their days like reporters in any community - looking for the story. Yet their own story, the lengthy history of their unique brand of journalism, remained largely unknown. In this volume James McGrath Morris seeks to address the history of this medium, the lives of the men and women who brought it to life, and the controversies that often surround it.

    1: Forlorn Hope; 2: When Luceppa Bared Her Bosom; 3: The Summary; 4: The Reformists’ Newspapers; 5: The Prison Mirror; 6: The Mentor; 7: The Subterranean Brotherhood; 8: Federal Scribes; 9: Can Opener, New Era, and the Wobblies; 10: The Rose Man of Sing Sing; 11: Harelike Growth; 12: Chronicling Wrongful Imprisonment; 13: Der Ruf; 14: Leaves from a Lifer’s Notebook; 15: Yoke of Censorship; 16: Bayou Style; 17: Fighting Back; 18: The First Amendment and the Prison Press; 19: Prison Journalism Writes “-30-”

    Biography

    James McGrath Morris