Jennifer Wynn\'s Inside Rikers Stories Essay

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Rikers

Jennifer Wynn's views and opinions come through clearly in chapters 5 through 7 of Inside Rikers. Chapter 5 begins with the author receiving the news that a former inmate is heading back to the island -- but not for another stint in prison. He is volunteering as a cook to show the inmates inside that one can actually make it on the outside: he has a job ($20k a year), a wife, and a baby. The author congratulates him on the good news, but inwardly wonders whether it is really all that great. $20k a year is nothing terrific -- and is hardly enough to support a family. But being an ex-con, there are limits to one can do on the outside. Society is not really set up in such a way that a former inmate can ever really be a normal citizen or achieve what others can who have never been on the inside. Wynn shares this with the reader, while supporting the former inmate with congratulatory expressions. The truth is that stability and familial support is good for the former inmate: it has meaning. And even if his socio-economic condition is never likely to improve, he at least has something. That's...
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Wynn's is guarded and if not outright skeptical at least saddened by the reality of life for former inmates. The terms are not that great.
Jennifer also knows how hard it is for ex-inmates just to achieve that much. With Carlos, she shows this. Carlos is afraid of not making it on the outside -- so she turns to her friend Paul to see if he can help with giving Carlos some meaningful work. Paul being an ex-con friendly employer (even though he's been burned before) agrees. It is a moment in which Jennifer acknowledges fully the sad reality of life for ex-cons. They are followed by a stigma everywhere they go -- they essentially wear a Scarlet A in so far as their record is concerned. Carlos, however, rises to the challenge and becomes indispensible to Paul.

Her view of the reality of life for these individuals is made even clear in the following two chapters which describe how hard it is for other ex-cons who can't make it on the outside and end up returning to Rikers. Something comes along, some strain, some stress that compels…

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Related Documents

Wynn, J. (2001). Inside Rikers: Stories from the World's Largest Penal Colony. New York: St. Martin's Press. Jennifer Wynn's Inside Rikers: Stories from the World's Largest Penal Colony tells the story of Rikers Island, one of America's most notorious prisons. Now housing about 16,000 individuals, Rikers Island is a genuine small city with a self-sustaining system including its own power generation. The phenomenon of prison culture is the main focus