America is fascinated by prisons and prison culture, but few Americans
understand what it is like to work in corrections. Claire Schmidt, whose
extended family includes three generations of Wisconsin prison workers,
introduces readers to penitentiary officers and staff as they share
stories, debate the role of corrections in American racial politics and
social justice, and talk about the important function of humor in their
jobs.
In a state that locks up a disproportionate number of men and women of
color, white prison workers occupy a complicated social position as
representatives of institutional authority and bearers of social stigma.
The job, by turns dangerous, dull, or dehumanizing, is aided by a quick
wit, comedic timing, and verbal agility. The men and women who do this
work rely on storytelling, practical jokes, and sarcasm to bond with
each other, build flexible relationships with inmates, and create
personal identities that work in and out of prison. Schmidt shows how
this humorous occupational culture both upholds and undermines prisons
as social institutions.
Issues of power and race, as well as sex and gender, infuse Schmidt's
groundbreaking analysis, and she also engages with current scholarship
about identity, occupational folklore, and family narrative. This
eye-opening, provocative book reveals the invisible culture, beliefs,
and aesthetics embedded in workplace humor.