Cell Count |
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Author:
| Bursk, Christopher |
Introduction by:
| Fink, Robert A. |
ISBN: | 978-0-89672-385-6 |
Publication Date: | Oct 1997 |
Publisher: | Texas Tech University Press
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Book Format: | Hardback |
List Price: | USD $18.95USD $18.95 |
Book Description:
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In 1996, 1.2 million citizens were incarcerated in U.S. prisons for violent crimes and other felonies. By the year 2000, that number is expected to exceed 2 million. In response to this crisis, throughout the nation, programs built largely on the work of volunteers have risen to challenge traditional concepts about the prison system and rehabilitation, and to engender a new awareness of possibilities. Cell Count, an eloquent and sensitive collection of poems, is the product of one...
More DescriptionIn 1996, 1.2 million citizens were incarcerated in U.S. prisons for violent crimes and other felonies. By the year 2000, that number is expected to exceed 2 million. In response to this crisis, throughout the nation, programs built largely on the work of volunteers have risen to challenge traditional concepts about the prison system and rehabilitation, and to engender a new awareness of possibilities. Cell Count, an eloquent and sensitive collection of poems, is the product of one such program. Cell Count's teacher-persona struggles to come to terms with his inmate-students who are tragically much more than the sum of their crimes."Cell Count is not a book for Sunday afternoon reading. Innocently, I stepped across the line into Christopher Bursk's world. An iron gate clanged shut, and I was alone, a red beam. . .aimed straight into my eyes, 'digging a tunnel into my brain./I had to stare into the center of that burning/till it was all I could see.'"Cell Count is not just a book about the prison system. When the guard-tower floodlights snap on, trapped in its crossbeams is the book's persona--a college instructor engaged in directing a poetry workshop in a reconverted storage closet in jail or counseling individual inmates in an interview room more cramped than a cell. He is teacher, poet, political activist, a man committed to making a difference in the lives of his students, yet he doesn't seem certain why he feels compelled to do so; he is not entirely sure he wants to try this hard. Cell Count details the life-quest of this activist who, despite his fears, his hatred of evil, his repugnance for violence, his despair at what may be a hopeless endeavor, still acts, still takes a stand." --Robert A. Fink