Illiterate Inmates Educating Criminals in Nineteenth Century England
Oxford University Press

Illiterate Inmates Educating Criminals in Nineteenth Century England

Subjects: British & Irish history, History
ISBN13: 9780198833833
Published: 04 Aug 2022

Format - Hardback
By Crone, Rosalind

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Regular price A$237.42
Sale price A$237.42 Regular price A$244.76

Illiterate Inmates Educating Criminals in Nineteenth Century England

Regular price A$237.42
Sale price A$237.42 Regular price A$244.76
Product description

The nineteenth-century prison, we have been told, was a place of 'hard labour, hard board, and hard fare'. Yet it was also a place of education. Schemes to teach prisoners to read and write, and sometimes more besides, can be traced to the early 1800s. State-funded elementary education for prisoners pre-dated universal and compulsory education for children by fifty years. In the 1860s, when the famous maxim, just cited, became the basis of national penal policy,
arithmetic was included by legislators alongside reading and writing as a core skill to be taught in English prisons. By c.1880 every prison in England used to accommodate those convicted of criminal
offences had a formal education programme in which the 3Rs - reading, writing, and arithmetic - were taught, to males and females, adults and children alike. Not every programme, however, had prisoners enrolled in it.Illiterate Inmates tells the story of the emergence, at the turn of the nineteenth century, of a powerful idea - the provision of education in prisons for those accused and convicted of crime - and its execution over the century that followed. Using
evidence from both local and convict prisons, the study shows how education became part of the modern penal regime. While the curriculum largely reflected that of mainstream elementary schools, the delivery of
education, shaped by the penal environment, created an entirely different educational experience. At the same time, philosophies of imprisonment which prioritised punishment and deterrence over reformation undermined any socially reconstructive ambitions. Thus the period between 1800 and 1899 witnessed the rise and fall of the prison school in England.

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