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The emergence of prison writing relied on convicts with the necessary writing skills to tell their stories from the inside. Early writings came from prisoners who had already begun to publish before being arrested. Among these early-20th-century writers was Jack London, who spent a month in 1894 in New York State's Erie County Penitentiary ...
Some other 20th-century prison writers include Jim Tully, Ernest Booth, Chester Himes, Nelson Algren, Robert Lowell, George Jackson, Jimmy Santiago Baca, and Kathy Boudin. Incarcerated authors of the 21st century, such as Arthur Longworth, author of Zek: An American Prison Story, have continued this tradition.
The Prison Notebooks (Italian: Quaderni del carcere [kwaˈdɛrni del ˈkartʃere]) [1] are a series of essays written by the Italian Marxist Antonio Gramsci. Gramsci was imprisoned by the Italian Fascist regime in 1926. The notebooks were written between 1929 and 1935, when Gramsci was released from prison to a medical center on grounds of ill ...
This is a partial list of 20th-century writers. This list includes notable artists, authors, philosophers, playwrights, poets, scientists and other important and noteworthy contributors to literature. The two most basic written literary categories include fiction and non fiction
France has had prison libraries since the mid-19th century. [40] They were established primarily through prison funds or donations made by prisoners. [41] Today, prison libraries are mandated by France's Criminal Procedure Code. [42] However, according to Cramard, these libraries vary in size, location, inmate access time, etc.
A memoir is an autobiographical writing normally dealing with a particular subject from the author's life. The following is a list of writers who have described their experiences of being political prisoners. Those included in the list are individuals who were imprisoned for activities ranging from peaceful dissent to violent revolutionary ...
Jay Robert Nash (November 26, 1937 – April 22, 2024) was an American author of more than 80 true crime books [1] once called the "world's foremost encyclopedist of crime." [2] Among Nash's crime anthologies are Encyclopedia of Western Lawmen and Outlaws, Look For the Woman, Bloodletters and Badmen, and The Great Pictorial History of World Crime.
On Heroes and Tombs by Ernesto Sabato (19th century, during the Civil War) Facundo: Civilization and Barbarism by Domingo F. Sarmiento (19th century) Santa Evita by Tomás Eloy Martínez (20th century, Eva Perón) El combate perpetuo by Marcos Aguinis (19th century, Admiral William Brown) La fragata Proserpina by Luis Delgado Bañón (19th century)