Contact: Sarah Ray



802-443-5794

sray@middlebury.edu

Posted: March 19, 2003

MIDDLEBURY, VT

- On April 8, 21 and 24, the Middlebury College Women’s and Gender Studies

Program will present its “Women in Prison” symposium, a seminar

series examining the circumstances leading to a woman’s imprisonment and

the potentially dangerous conditions she endures once put behind bars.

The symposium will incorporate a variety of multi-media events, from documentaries

filmed inside jailhouse walls to a lecture given by a former inmate. All

events are free and open to the public.

Each year, the number

of women locked up in the United States increases dramatically. Greater

than 90,000 women are currently in prison-seven times more than in 1980.

This number grows faster each year according to Theodore Sasson, co-author

of “The Politics of Injustice,” associate professor of sociology

and anthropology at Middlebury, and one of the symposium organizers.

Sasson also points

out that the events leading to a woman’s imprisonment and the environment

she experiences upon arrival are vastly different from a man’s: Women

tend to commit less violent crimes, and when they do, such offenses frequently

arise in response to previously suffered abuses. Most jailed women wrestle

with issues of pregnancy and single parenthood as well. Amnesty International

reported in 1999 that “sexual misconduct and various forms of abuse

and neglect of women inmates so pervade the U.S. correctional system that

human rights violations are virtually a daily part of prison life.”

Deborah Grant, director

of the Middlebury College May Belle Chellis Women’s Resource Center and

one of the symposium organizers, said, “Women have suffered greatly

while in jail and prison. Society needs a better understanding of what

exactly goes on behind closed prison doors.”

The symposium begins

at 4:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 8, with a talk by Kathryn Watterson called

“Women in Prison.” Watterson is lecturer in the Council of Humanities

at Princeton

University and has also written numerous works of nonfiction, three of

which The New York Times chose as Notable Books of the Year. Watterson

will discuss her book “Women in Prison: Inside the Concrete Womb,”

the basis for the 1999 ABC “Nightline” six-part documentary,

“Crime and Punishment: Women in Prison.” The event will take

place in Warner Hemicycle on College Street (Route 125).

During the week of April 13, there will be a display of books on the subject

of women in prison in an exhibit case at the entrance to the Meredith

Wing of Starr Library, on South Main Street (Route 30). In the same location,

visitors may view a video of poetry readings given by inmates at a woman’s

prison, the Bedford Hills Correctional Facility in Westchester County,

N.Y., from Sunday, April 13-Thursday, April 17, at 7:30 p.m.

On Monday, April 21, at 7:30 p.m., Alexandra Juhasz, associate professor

of media history and theory, video production/post-production and women’s

studies at Pitzer College in Claremont, Calif., will present the documentary

she directed and produced, “RELEASED-Short Videos about Women and

Prison,” in Dana Auditorium in Sunderland Language Center on College

Street (Route 125). Juhasz has produced more than 15 films and videos

and will engage in a discussion about her work following the screening.

“Doing Time in NY” is the final lecture in the “Women in

Prison” series and will take place on Thursday, April 24, at 4:30

p.m. in Warner Hemicycle. The presenter, Jan Warren, was incarcerated

for more than 12 years under New York’s Rockefeller drug laws, and has

since become an advocate for women in prison. Warren is currently the

associate director of the College and Community Fellowship at CUNY Graduate

Center’s Center for the Study of Women and Society. She is also a contributing

writer to “Aliens at the Border, Doing Time: Twenty-five Years of

Prison Writing, and Borrowed Light.”

Several Middlebury College organizations co-sponsored one or more of the

symposium events: the sociology/anthropology department, the office of

institutional diversity, the film and media culture program, and Ross

Commons.

For more information, please contact Deborah Grant, director of Middlebury

College’s Chellis House, at 802-443-5937, or dgrant@middlebury.edu.

To follow are events calendar listings:

Events

Calendar Listings

“Women

in Prison” Symposium

Middlebury College

Tuesday, April 8; Monday, April 21; and Thursday, April 24

Tuesday,

April 8

4:30

p.m.

Lecture: “Women in Prison”

Kathryn Watterson, author and Lecturer in the Council of Humanities at

Princeton University

Warner Hemicycle, Warner Hall, Middlebury College Street (Route 125)

Free

Sunday,

April 13-Thursday, April 17

Book

Display: Books related to the subject of women in prison will be on

display.

Exhibit case at the entrance to Meredith Wing, Middlebury College Starr

Library on South Main Street (Route 30)

Free

7:30

p.m. Each Night

Video Screening: A video of poetry readings by inmates from

a women’s prison, the Bedford Hills Correctional Facility in Westchester

County, N.Y., will be on display.

Entrance to Meredith Wing, Middlebury College Starr Library on South Main

Street (Route 30)

Free

Monday,

April 21

7:30

p.m.

Documentary Screening and Discussion: “RELEASED-Short Videos

about Women and Prison”

Alexandra Juhasz, Associate Professor of Media History and Theory, Video

Production/Post-Production and Women’s Studies at Pitzer College

Dana Auditorium in Sunderland Language Center, Middlebury College, College

Street (Route 125)

Free

Thursday,

April 24

4:30

p.m.

Lecture: “Doing Time in NY”

Jan Warren, Associate Director of the College and Community Fellowship

at CUNY Graduate Center’s Center for the Study of Women and Society.

Warner Hemicycle, Warner Hall, Middlebury College, College Street (Route

125)

Free

For

more information, please contact Deborah Grant, director of Middlebury

College’s Chellis House, at 802-443-5937, or dgrant@middlebury.edu