DOAJ Open Access 2016

Imposed Stories: Prisoner Self-narratives in the Criminal Justice System in New South Wales, Australia

Maggie Hall Kate Rossmanith

Abstrak

This article examines the ways in which offenders are required to provide very particular accounts of themselves and to self-narrate in confined ways. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork and interviews conducted in the New South Wales justice system, it explores how the stories that offenders are made to accept and tell about themselves often bear little relationship to their own reflections. It analyses how, despite the expectations of judges and prison authorities, these self-narratives are not products of an offender’s soul-searching concerning his past actions and experience; rather they are products of an official legal narrative being imposed on an offender whose capacity to own and enact such a narrative is already seriously compromised.

Penulis (2)

M

Maggie Hall

K

Kate Rossmanith

Format Sitasi

Hall, M., Rossmanith, K. (2016). Imposed Stories: Prisoner Self-narratives in the Criminal Justice System in New South Wales, Australia. https://doi.org/10.5204/ijcjsd.v5i1.284

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Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2016
Sumber Database
DOAJ
DOI
10.5204/ijcjsd.v5i1.284
Akses
Open Access ✓