Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- [UNTITLED]
- [UNTITLED]
- Introduction. Certain Failures: Representing the Experiences of Incarcerated Women in the United States
-
Part One Defining the Problem -
Part Two Being a Mother from Inside -
Part Three Intimacy, Sexuality, and Gender Identity Inside -
Part Four Creating and Maintaining Intellectual, Spiritual, and Creative Life Inside -
Part Five Struggling for Health Care -
Part Six Serving Time, Sentenced and Unsentenced -
Part Seven Struggling for Rights -
61 Incarcerated Young Mothers’ Bill of Rights: From a Vision to a Policy at San Francisco Juvenile Hall -
62 Slaving in Prison: A Three-Part Indictment -
63 Freedom Gon’ Come -
64 Reducing the Number of People in California’s Women’s Prisons: How “Gender-Responsive Prisons” Harm Women, Children, and Families -
65 The Gender-Responsive Prison Expansion Movement -
66 Free Battered Women -
67 Life’s Imprint -
68 Testimony of Kemba Smith before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights: March 3, 2006 -
69 Keeping Families Connected: Women Organizing for Telephone Justice in the Face of Corporate-State Greed -
70 Prick Poison -
71 The Prison-Industrial Complex in Indigenous California -
72 A Prison Journal -
Part Eight Being Out - Contributors
- Index
Life’s Imprint
Life’s Imprint
- Chapter:
- (p.341) 67 Life’s Imprint
- Source:
- Interrupted Life
- Author(s):
Michele Molina
- Publisher:
- University of California Press
DOI:10.1525/california/9780520252493.003.0068
In her poem entitled “Life's Imprint,” Michele Molina talks about how abuse inflicts pain, how it “takes the color out of life.”.
Keywords: Michele Molina, poem, abuse, pain
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- Title Pages
- [UNTITLED]
- [UNTITLED]
- Introduction. Certain Failures: Representing the Experiences of Incarcerated Women in the United States
-
Part One Defining the Problem -
Part Two Being a Mother from Inside -
Part Three Intimacy, Sexuality, and Gender Identity Inside -
Part Four Creating and Maintaining Intellectual, Spiritual, and Creative Life Inside -
Part Five Struggling for Health Care -
Part Six Serving Time, Sentenced and Unsentenced -
Part Seven Struggling for Rights -
61 Incarcerated Young Mothers’ Bill of Rights: From a Vision to a Policy at San Francisco Juvenile Hall -
62 Slaving in Prison: A Three-Part Indictment -
63 Freedom Gon’ Come -
64 Reducing the Number of People in California’s Women’s Prisons: How “Gender-Responsive Prisons” Harm Women, Children, and Families -
65 The Gender-Responsive Prison Expansion Movement -
66 Free Battered Women -
67 Life’s Imprint -
68 Testimony of Kemba Smith before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights: March 3, 2006 -
69 Keeping Families Connected: Women Organizing for Telephone Justice in the Face of Corporate-State Greed -
70 Prick Poison -
71 The Prison-Industrial Complex in Indigenous California -
72 A Prison Journal -
Part Eight Being Out - Contributors
- Index