How prisoners serve as media laborers, while the prison serves as a testing ground for new media technologies.
Prisons are not typically known for cutting-edge media technologies. Yet from photography in the nineteenth century to AI-enhanced tracking cameras today, there is a long history of prisons being used as a testing ground for technologies that are later adopted by the general public. If we recognize the prison as a central site for the development of media technologies, how might that change our understanding of both media systems and carceral systems? Prison Media foregrounds the ways in which the prison is a model space for the control and transmission of information, a place where media is produced, and a medium in its own right.
Examining the relationship between media and prison architecture, as surveillance and communication technologies are literally built into the facilities, this study also considers the ways in which prisoners themselves often do hard labor as media workers—labor that contributes in direct and indirect ways to the latest technologies developed and sold by multinational corporations like Amazon. There is a fine line between ankle monitors and Fitbits, and Prison Media helps us make sense of today's carceral society.
Conditions of Use
This book is licensed under a Creative Commons License (CC BY-NC-ND). You can download the ebook Prison Media for free.
- Title
- Prison Media
- Subtitle
- Incarceration and the Infrastructures of Work and Technology
- Publisher
- The MIT Press
- Author(s)
- Anne Kaun, Fredrik Stiernstedt
- Published
- 2023-05-16
- Edition
- 1
- Format
- eBook (pdf, epub, mobi)
- Pages
- 184
- Language
- English
- ISBN-10
- 0262545497
- ISBN-13
- 9780262374347
- License
- CC BY-NC-ND
- Book Homepage
- Free eBook, Errata, Code, Solutions, etc.
Preface 1: Introduction: Why Prison Media Matter 2: Penal Regimes and Prison Reforms: 1800–2000 3: Made in Prison: Prison Media Work 4: Building Prisons: Prison Media Architecture 5: Imagining the Prison: Prison Media Technologies 6: Conclusion: Prison Media and Mobile Incarceration Notes References Index