Fr. 27.90

In A Whole New Way: Undoing Mass Incarceration by a Path Untraveled

English · Paperback / Softback

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A Next Generation Indie Book Awards Finalist for Social Justice.In a Whole New Way is a photographic self-portrait by New Yorkers who are serving a term of probation. The book also lifts the veil on this “second-chance” justice intervention that has spread from its origins in 1841 Boston to most of the world today.

If all Americans serving a term of probation were gathered in one locale, they would constitute the third-largest city in the country. Yet few of us understand what the sanction involves. Nor do many Americans realize that the originally rehabilitative practice became punitive following the 1972–92 crime wave. In many jurisdictions, it still is. Probation unfortunately has become a staging area for incarceration rather than its alternative.

In a Whole New Way shows how hundreds of determined city residents on probation, along with neighborhood allies, undertook to change this. Equipped with cameras and new artistic sensibilities provided by the editors’ nonprofit Seeing for Ourselves, they set off in a whole new way to reform the sanction of probation, returning it to the rehabilitative and positive program it was originally intended to be. In the process, they found themselves transformed.

The result of their journey is this unique collection of stunning photographs, accentuated by deeply personal captions and lengthier testimonies, that reveal the reality of life in probation. The stories of these participants powerfully undercut their own—and probation’s—derogatory popular image. The true goal of this book is to reform the entire justice system toward decarceration.

In a Whole New Way is both the sequel to the editors’ Project Lives (2015), the globally acclaimed volume resulting from a similar effort with New Yorkers living in public housing—a work catapulting Seeing for Ourselves to the front tier of
“participatory photography” practitioners worldwide—and the source of today’s award-winning eponymous documentary film, airing on select public television stations in 2023.


List of contents










PREFACE.

INTRODUCTION.

ONE. EQUIPPING AND TRAINING THE JUSTICE WARRIORS

The Evolution of Participatory Photography

Teachings

TWO. MISSION.

THREE. COPING WITH LAW ENFORCEMENT

FOUR. THE STIGMA

FIVE. OUT IN THE WORLD

SIX. THE PICTURES.

WORKSHOPS

PROFESSIONAL ASSIGNMENTS

SEVEN. THE FRONT END OF CORRECTIONAL SUPERVISION

Origins

Evolving Practice

Taking Off

The Whole Enchilada

EIGHT. PARTICIPANTS

Their Stories

NINE. CRIME, PUNISHMENT, AND AMERICAN JUSTICE

THE WORK/PART ONE

TEN. THE ROAD TO REFORM

ELEVEN. NEW YORK CITY PROBATION TODAY

THE WORK/PART TWO

TWELVE. REFRAMED

EXHIBITIONS

THIRTEEN. STAKES.

THE WORK/PART THREE

FOURTEEN. ANSWERS.

THE WORK/PART FOUR

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

BIBLIOGRAPHY


About the author

George Carrano grew up in the Bronx. He worked as a civil servant in New York City for twenty-five years before retiring to pursue his true passion, the visual arts. Carrano has subsequently devoted his time to equipping and training the marginalized to take back their public narrative through the mechanism of participatory photography—the basis for the nonprofit Seeing for Ourselves he founded in 2010. Project Lives was his first book and In a Whole New Way his first film.
Jonathan Fisher was raised in the Bronx. He was one of those obnoxious brats pushing everyone out of the way on the subway trains so that he could look out the front window. After earning a master’s degree in transportation, Fisher pursued a childhood dream by working for the subway system for twenty-six years. He joined Seeing for Ourselves in 2013 as its storyteller. Project
Lives
was his first book. Writing and directing In a Whole New Way allowed him to cross another item off his bucket list.

Summary

A Next Generation Indie Book Awards Finalist for Social Justice.In a Whole New Way is a photographic self-portrait by New Yorkers who are serving a term of probation. The book also lifts the veil on this “second-chance” justice intervention that has spread from its origins in 1841 Boston to most of the world today.

If all Americans serving a term of probation were gathered in one locale, they would constitute the third-largest city in the country. Yet few of us understand what the sanction involves. Nor do many Americans realize that the originally rehabilitative practice became punitive following the 1972–92 crime wave. In many jurisdictions, it still is. Probation unfortunately has become a staging area for incarceration rather than its alternative.

In a Whole New Way shows how hundreds of determined city residents on probation, along with neighborhood allies, undertook to change this. Equipped with cameras and new artistic sensibilities provided by the editors’ nonprofit Seeing for Ourselves, they set off in a whole new way to reform the sanction of probation, returning it to the rehabilitative and positive program it was originally intended to be. In the process, they found themselves transformed.

The result of their journey is this unique collection of stunning photographs, accentuated by deeply personal captions and lengthier testimonies, that reveal the reality of life in probation. The stories of these participants powerfully undercut their own—and probation’s—derogatory popular image. The true goal of this book is to reform the entire justice system toward decarceration.

In a Whole New Way is both the sequel to the editors’ Project Lives (2015), the globally acclaimed volume resulting from a similar effort with New Yorkers living in public housing—a work catapulting Seeing for Ourselves to the front tier of
“participatory photography” practitioners worldwide—and the source of today’s award-winning eponymous documentary film, airing on select public television stations in 2023.

Product details

Assisted by George Carrano (Editor), Jonathan Fisher (Editor)
Publisher Ingram Publishers Services
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 06.06.2023
 
EAN 9781632261175
ISBN 978-1-63226-117-5
No. of pages 220
Illustrations Plus
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Art > Photography, film, video, TV
Social sciences, law, business > Social sciences (general)

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Criminology, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Social Policy, PHOTOGRAPHY / Photoessays & Documentaries, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Law Enforcement

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