Doing Time Together: Love and Family in the Shadow of the Prison

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University of Chicago Press, May 15, 2009 - Social Science - 256 pages
By quadrupling the number of people behind bars in two decades, the United States has become the world leader in incarceration. Much has been written on the men who make up the vast majority of the nation’s two million inmates. But what of the women they leave behind? Doing Time Together vividly details the ways that prisons shape and infiltrate the lives of women with husbands, fiancés, and boyfriends on the inside.

Megan Comfort spent years getting to know women visiting men at San Quentin State Prison, observing how their romantic relationships drew them into contact with the penitentiary. Tangling with the prison’s intrusive scrutiny and rigid rules turns these women into “quasi-inmates,” eroding the boundary between home and prison and altering their sense of intimacy, love, and justice. Yet Comfort also finds that with social welfare weakened, prisons are the most powerful public institutions available to women struggling to overcome untreated social ills and sustain relationships with marginalized men. As a result, they express great ambivalence about the prison and the control it exerts over their daily lives.

An illuminating analysis of women caught in the shadow of America’s massive prison system, Comfort’s book will be essential for anyone concerned with the consequences of our punitive culture.
 

Contents

1 Outside the Prison Walls
1
2 OnLine at San Quentin
21
3 We Share Everything We Can the Best Way We Can
65
The Prison as Domestic Satellite
99
5 Its a Lot of Good Men behind Walls
126
6 The Long Way Home
185
Setting and Methods
199
An Orientation to the Research Literature
214
United States Carceral Population 19802000
223
Field Documents
225
References
231
Index
251
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About the author (2009)

Megan Comfort is a sociologist at the Center for AIDS Prevention Studies at the University of California, San Francisco.

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