Fathers, Prisons, and Family Reentry: Presencing as a Framework and
Method asks scholars, policy makers, advocates, and practitioners to
rethink family reentry in a new light, to seek to understand both the
urgent and intolerable loss as well as the real and present potential of
families. There are almost one million parents of minor-aged children
currently serving time in U.S. prisons-most of them fathers. Based on
post-phenomenological analyses, William Muth offers a new framework for
conceptualizing family reentry as a present phenomenon. It seeks to
reveal the intense ways incarcerated fathers and their families live
their present-absence, and draws on these intensities to define a new
role for researchers and practitioners: nurturing the potential of
families in the here and now. The current situation is intolerable. A
credible family reentry approach is urgently needed. This book is an
attempt to address these families as they potentially are, and might
become, if we would be willing to "meet them half-way," in the words of
the poet Alice Fulton.