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sup3r_xn0va_maya's review against another edition
challenging
dark
emotional
informative
sad
fast-paced
4.0
This was an okay intro to Abolition feminism but the language was very dense, dry, and the text felt very academic. Despite those complaints, I still learned a fair amount. Thought, I still have basic questions like, "if we get of prisons, what do we do with the repeat rapists and murderess? The repeat violent offenders?" At one point the text even says something like, hardcore abolitionist are always criticized and asked what should be done with police officers who are repeat offenders and there was no answer, so like? What do we do with them?
Overall I liked what I read but I still have that one burning question left, I didn't get an answer that satisfied me unfortunately.
Overall I'm giving this 4 stars out of 5
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
I listened to this for free on the library app libbyapp.com
Overall I liked what I read but I still have that one burning question left, I didn't get an answer that satisfied me unfortunately.
Overall I'm giving this 4 stars out of 5
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
I listened to this for free on the library app libbyapp.com
Graphic: Confinement, Death, Forced institutionalization, Grief, Racism, Murder, Gun violence, Violence, Sexual assault, Sexual violence, Misogyny, Child death, Police brutality, Pandemic/Epidemic, and Rape
displacedcactus's review against another edition
challenging
informative
slow-paced
You can really tell this book was written by four professors. Example: They keep saying that their book has short chapters. It consists of three chapters which are FIFTY PAGES EACH.
Anyway, this book is probably great if you're doing a deep dive on the police/prison abolition movement, but this was my first book on the subject and it was a lot. Lots and lots of very academic language and references to specific movements, and not a lot of information on the how and why of abolition. Definitely don't start here. Learn from my mistake!
Anyway, this book is probably great if you're doing a deep dive on the police/prison abolition movement, but this was my first book on the subject and it was a lot. Lots and lots of very academic language and references to specific movements, and not a lot of information on the how and why of abolition. Definitely don't start here. Learn from my mistake!
Graphic: Racism and Police brutality
stevia333k's review against another edition
informative
fast-paced
5.0
It's been a while since I read this book, but it's lovely.
I read this book because since 2021 I've been kind of using a lens of war rape culture to frame racial capitalist patriarchy. Whether I'm doing that well is another matter I don't know how to test yet. -- Point being, in contrast to that I have "consent culture", and as I've been getting educated the past couple of years it's become apparent that I want to work with an abolitionist framework. So this book was awesome, and it read so much quicker than I thought it would. I love the data tables at the back that have the 4 questions along with the various strategies because I remember wanting more specifics about the (prison) abolitionist activism profiled in the anthology "captive genders".
I read this book because since 2021 I've been kind of using a lens of war rape culture to frame racial capitalist patriarchy. Whether I'm doing that well is another matter I don't know how to test yet. -- Point being, in contrast to that I have "consent culture", and as I've been getting educated the past couple of years it's become apparent that I want to work with an abolitionist framework. So this book was awesome, and it read so much quicker than I thought it would. I love the data tables at the back that have the 4 questions along with the various strategies because I remember wanting more specifics about the (prison) abolitionist activism profiled in the anthology "captive genders".
Graphic: Racism, Police brutality, and Sexism
michaelion's review against another edition
hopeful
informative
medium-paced
3.5
This isn't a negative of the book but this is my first nonfiction reading that isn't for a class, and I'm just realizing all nonfiction books are very repetitive.
Moderate: Classism, Confinement, Domestic abuse, Forced institutionalization, Murder, Police brutality, Sexism, Gun violence, Sexual assault, and Racism
Minor: Torture
lauradvb's review against another edition
challenging
informative
reflective
slow-paced
3.5
Moderate: Rape and Police brutality
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