Words Is a Powerful Thing: Twenty Years of Teaching Creative Writing at Douglas County Jail
Brian Daldorph first entered the Douglas County Jail classroom in Lawrence, Kansas, to teach a writing class on Christmas Eve 2001. His last class at the jail for the foreseeable future was mid-March 2020, right before the COVID-19 lockdown; the virus is taking a heavy toll in confined communities like nursing homes and prisons. Words Is a Powerful Thing is Daldorph’s record of teaching at the jail for the two decades between 2001 and 2020, showing how the lives of everyone involved in the class—but especially the inmates who came to class week after week—benefited from what happened every Thursday afternoon in that jail classroom, where for two hours inmates and instructor became a circle of ink and blood, writing together, reciting their poems, telling stories, and having a few good laughs.

Words Is a Powerful Thing brings into the light the works of fifty talented inmate writers whose work deserves attention. Their poetry speaks of “what really matters” to all of us and gives the reader sustained insight into the role that creativity plays in aiding survival and bringing positive change for inmates, and, in turn, for all of us. Daldorph’s account of his teaching experience not only takes the reader inside the daily life at a county jail but also sets the work done in the writing class within the larger context of inmate education is the US corrections system, where education is often one of the few lifelines available to inmates. Words Is a Powerful Thing provides a teaching guide for instructors working with incarcerated writers, offering an extensive examination of both the challenges and benefits.

When Brian Daldorph decided the story of his classroom experiences and the great writing produced by the inmates deserved to be told to wider audiences, he struggled with how to bring it all together. Not long after, an inmate wrote a poem titled “Words Is a Powerful Thing,” offering Daldorph a title, concept, and purpose: to show that the poetry of inmates speaks not just to other inmates but to all of us.
1138377749
Words Is a Powerful Thing: Twenty Years of Teaching Creative Writing at Douglas County Jail
Brian Daldorph first entered the Douglas County Jail classroom in Lawrence, Kansas, to teach a writing class on Christmas Eve 2001. His last class at the jail for the foreseeable future was mid-March 2020, right before the COVID-19 lockdown; the virus is taking a heavy toll in confined communities like nursing homes and prisons. Words Is a Powerful Thing is Daldorph’s record of teaching at the jail for the two decades between 2001 and 2020, showing how the lives of everyone involved in the class—but especially the inmates who came to class week after week—benefited from what happened every Thursday afternoon in that jail classroom, where for two hours inmates and instructor became a circle of ink and blood, writing together, reciting their poems, telling stories, and having a few good laughs.

Words Is a Powerful Thing brings into the light the works of fifty talented inmate writers whose work deserves attention. Their poetry speaks of “what really matters” to all of us and gives the reader sustained insight into the role that creativity plays in aiding survival and bringing positive change for inmates, and, in turn, for all of us. Daldorph’s account of his teaching experience not only takes the reader inside the daily life at a county jail but also sets the work done in the writing class within the larger context of inmate education is the US corrections system, where education is often one of the few lifelines available to inmates. Words Is a Powerful Thing provides a teaching guide for instructors working with incarcerated writers, offering an extensive examination of both the challenges and benefits.

When Brian Daldorph decided the story of his classroom experiences and the great writing produced by the inmates deserved to be told to wider audiences, he struggled with how to bring it all together. Not long after, an inmate wrote a poem titled “Words Is a Powerful Thing,” offering Daldorph a title, concept, and purpose: to show that the poetry of inmates speaks not just to other inmates but to all of us.
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Words Is a Powerful Thing: Twenty Years of Teaching Creative Writing at Douglas County Jail

Words Is a Powerful Thing: Twenty Years of Teaching Creative Writing at Douglas County Jail

by Brian Daldorph
Words Is a Powerful Thing: Twenty Years of Teaching Creative Writing at Douglas County Jail

Words Is a Powerful Thing: Twenty Years of Teaching Creative Writing at Douglas County Jail

by Brian Daldorph

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Overview

Brian Daldorph first entered the Douglas County Jail classroom in Lawrence, Kansas, to teach a writing class on Christmas Eve 2001. His last class at the jail for the foreseeable future was mid-March 2020, right before the COVID-19 lockdown; the virus is taking a heavy toll in confined communities like nursing homes and prisons. Words Is a Powerful Thing is Daldorph’s record of teaching at the jail for the two decades between 2001 and 2020, showing how the lives of everyone involved in the class—but especially the inmates who came to class week after week—benefited from what happened every Thursday afternoon in that jail classroom, where for two hours inmates and instructor became a circle of ink and blood, writing together, reciting their poems, telling stories, and having a few good laughs.

Words Is a Powerful Thing brings into the light the works of fifty talented inmate writers whose work deserves attention. Their poetry speaks of “what really matters” to all of us and gives the reader sustained insight into the role that creativity plays in aiding survival and bringing positive change for inmates, and, in turn, for all of us. Daldorph’s account of his teaching experience not only takes the reader inside the daily life at a county jail but also sets the work done in the writing class within the larger context of inmate education is the US corrections system, where education is often one of the few lifelines available to inmates. Words Is a Powerful Thing provides a teaching guide for instructors working with incarcerated writers, offering an extensive examination of both the challenges and benefits.

When Brian Daldorph decided the story of his classroom experiences and the great writing produced by the inmates deserved to be told to wider audiences, he struggled with how to bring it all together. Not long after, an inmate wrote a poem titled “Words Is a Powerful Thing,” offering Daldorph a title, concept, and purpose: to show that the poetry of inmates speaks not just to other inmates but to all of us.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780700632176
Publisher: University Press of Kansas
Publication date: 07/01/2021
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 248
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Brian Daldorph is a creative writing instructor, Douglas County Jail, Lawrence, Kansas, and a senior lecturer, English Department, University of Kansas. He is the author of six books of poetry including Kansas Poems and Blue Notes, and the editor of the literary journal Coal City Review.

Table of Contents

Preface

Acknowledgments

1. “Imagination Knows No Cinder Blocks”: Education Inside the Walls

2. “What Truly Matters”: Teaching Creative Writing at Douglas County Jail, Lawrence, Kansas

3. “Sing Soft, Sing Loud”: The Literature of US Jails and Prisons

4. No “Snitches,” No “N-Word”: Rules of the Class

5. “Self-Expression, Self-Destruction”: Creative Writing Class, May 18, 2017

6. “In This Circle of Ink and Blood/We Are for Awhile, Brothers”: A Poem a Year—Inmate Poetry 2001–2017

7. “My Name Is Methamphetamine”: Douglas County Jail Blues, Volumes 1 and 2

8. “[The] Automatic Connection Between Inmates in Class and Mr. Cash”: Johnny Cash’s Hurt

9. Maine Man: Mike Caron, Programs Director, Douglas County Jail (2001–2015)

10. “It Don’t Get More Real Than That”: The Poetry of Antonio Sanchez-Day

11. “Mainly I Just Want to Help People Because No One Helped Me”: Sherry Gill, Programs Director, Douglas County Jail (2015–)

12. “I Done Good and I Done Bad”: Topeka’s Bad Man from the Badlands, Gary Holmes

13. “It Really Is a Form of Counseling, in a Sense”: Mike Hartnett

14. “It’s Just So Much More Than a Poetry Class”: Visitors

15. “Don’t Carry Much with Me No More”: The Songs of Troubadour Joe Parish

16. “The Creativity Faucet Is Still On, and We Are All Drippin’ Wet in Poetry!”: Last Words (for Now)

Epilogue

Appendix A. Reflections from Former Writing Class Volunteers, Douglas County Jail

Appendix B. Permission Form, Douglas County Correctional Facility: Poetry Anthology

Notes

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