Joey Whitfield is Lecturer in Latin American and Hispanic Studies at Cardiff University, UK.
Whitfield's careful and nuanced readings provide a new standpoint from which to consider broader structures of domination ... The book is a valuable examination of the conditions of social solidarity, and a demonstration of the role that the literary imagination (of both the writer and reader) can play in (re)configuring ethical bonds underpinning a movement towards social justice. * Modern Language Review * Highly original in terms of its subject matter and displaying evidence of extensive research, Prison Writing of Latin America engages thoughtfully and intelligently with primary and secondary materials in order to develop a substantial contribution to our understanding of prison culture and Latin-American culture. The book offers both a theoretical reflection around notions of penality and a specific study of literary and artistic representations of prison culture in a modern Latin-American context. It is very effective on both levels. It includes a nuanced and highly reflective internal debate about ways of thinking about prison, punishment, resistance and the state. The corpus is varied and helps unfold a broad-ranging and complex set of considerations about state punishment that is sensitive to ambiguity and contradiction while maintaining a kind of committed ethical thrust. An extremely valuable book. * Philip Swanson, Hughes Professor of Spanish, University of Sheffield, UK * With this poignant book, Whitfield opens the gate to Latin-American prison writers for an English-speaking audience. Their creative writings are a testimony of persistent penal violence that reinforces class, race and gender hierarchies. A book that must be read by anyone concerned with criticism of the Penal State and alternative paths toward social justice in the continent. * R. Aida Hernandez Castillo, Professor and Senior Researcher, Center for Research and Advanced Studies in Social Anthropology (CIESAS), Mexico, and author of Multiple InJustices: Indigenous Women, Law and Political Struggle (2016) *