News (Media Awareness Project) - US NC: Edu: The Reality of Prison |
Title: | US NC: Edu: The Reality of Prison |
Published On: | 2007-11-15 |
Source: | Blue Banner, The (NC Edu) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-11 18:35:35 |
THE REALITY OF PRISON
"Thousand Kites" unveils the oppressive reality of the U.S. prison
system and it's effect on prisioners, guards and their familes in the
emotional production presented by Theatre UNC Asheville Stages.
"In the play 'Thousand Kites,' a kite represents a message or a
letter going in or coming out of a prison," said Scott Walters,
associate professor of drama. "The ideas and renowned work of
Appalshop show the true devastation caused by prison construction,
and the emotional and political toll burdened on rural communities,
prisoners, guards and the families of both."
Appalshop, a nonprofit-multi-disciplinary arts and education center,
based in Whitesburg, Ky., wrote the play and sent scripts to
universities. Appalshop strives to artistically expose community
problems through original films, radio, photography, books and
spoken-word. They expose destructive problems facing the nation,
according to Casey Morris, prisoner in the production.
"This play is a little different than most," Morris said. "All of our
lines are not directed towards actors in the play they are a
projected meaningful message for the audience. The play works on a
whole different perspective than most. Everything that is written in
the play, are words taken straight from the mouths of many families,
prison guards, prisoners and communities. We are acting real life."
In 1999, AppalShop with the collaboration of DJs Amelia Kirby and
Nick Szuberla, began the idea of exposing America's prison crisis
through a hip-hop radio show near the Supermax prison Wallens Ridge
State Prison in Whitesburg, Ky., according to Appalshop.
"Through Kirby and Szuberlas' radio show, called 'Holler to the
Hood,' poems and letters to and from the inmates of the nearby
Wallens Ridge State Prison, as well as letters from local families
and community members began flooding in," Walters said. "They pulled
all of this information together and created a play from the actual
works of inmates, guards and their families."
Scott Walters works as a teacher in a N.C. division of prisons. He
teaches a drama production course and a literature course to inmates
convicted of everything from armed robbery and murder to sexual
assault. He worked with an inmate who burnt his elementary school
down, according to Walters.
"I have been teaching in a N.C. prison for about six years," Walters
said. "The course I tought a class focused on Joseph Campbell's ideas
about the heroes journey.
Used as an application to the inmates' own lives, they see their time
in prison not as a wasteland of waiting until they get out, but as a
thought provoking experience in which they are challenged. Hopefully
when they leave they will bring wisdom back to the community. I try
to get them to look at their experience in the prison as being
something that is preparing them for a positive outlook when they go
back home."
UNC Asheville hosts the first ever production of this play in the
nation, which will eventually perform in many professional theaters
all over the country, according to Walters.
"The play itself is supposed to have a lot of audience interaction,"
said Brian Sneeden, assistant director and double major in drama and
creative writing. "Thousand
Kites is broken up into three parts. The first part is the actual
performance written by Donna Porterfield, where a prisoner, guard and
five chorus members speak out. There are two parents of both the
prisoner, guard and also one voice representing a community. The
first act is the script play which lasts about 45 minutes, followed
by a 15-minute intermission. The unique second act is the showing of
the documentary film 'Up the Ridge', a harsh reality documentary
about the effects of the building of the Wallens Ridge Supermax
prison just outside of Whitesburg, Ky, created by Appalshop with the
help of Kirby. The third act is then an open discussion with the audience."
The play runs the gambit from anger to sadness to humor. There are
funny stories about prison food, tricks played on guards and music
written by Appalshop, according to Walters.
"The ultimate goal is to raise awareness, Walters said. "I think most
of us have a vague idea about prison, and believe the people in there
ought to be there, and they probably have it pretty good. The more
research we have done, we have found this to be far deeper than what
one may think."
This is not a play designed like political theater telling people
what to think. It is rather a play that raises questions and asks
people to empathize with the situation, according to Walters
"I think the questions raised are 'Is this the best way to deal with
crime?'" Sneeden said. "15 prisons have been built each year for the
past 20 years. All of that is derived from Nixon's first initiation
of instilling 'political toughness on crime', which was his campaign
slogan. As a result we have the birth of the prison industrial
complex, or the privatization of prisons as a corporation. A huge
concern with the prison system is the privatization of prisons, such
as the Wallens Ridge State Prison shown in the documentary.
Communities buy a prison, rent it to the state and then pay a yearly
fee, increasing income into the community. This is a multi-million
dollar industry. Prisons are now more business-oriented."
The Avery-Mitchell Correctional Facility shows how prisons put in
rural environments make communities dependant on them, according to
Sneeten. The people want to work there due to the higher wages in
comparison to poorly paid jobs of the community.
"One of the most important issues touched on by this play is how
these prisons, primarily built in rural communities, harm the
community," Walters said. "The Supermax prisons are usually built in
economically depressed towns. The state sees it as a way to
economically bolster the town. The minute this happens, all of these
people take jobs there. They become stressed out due to the
conditions they are working in, and suddenly there is an upswing in
alcoholism, substance abuse and domestic violence."
Since 1987, prison population has risen from under one million to
almost three million, due to sentencing guidelines, elimination of
parole and the three strikes you're out policy, according to Walters
"I think the people will come out with far more awareness of how the
prison system actually works," Sneeten said. "The play will show how
the fundamental system may not be the most appropriate, and certainly
not an efficient system for punishing certain rehabilitating criminals."
50 percent of people in the federal prison system, and 49 percent in
the state prison system are there on drug charges, according to the
U.S. Department of Justice.
"We must think if this is really an effective way to deal with this,"
Sneeten said. "If we sent people to a rehabilitation center, it would
cost a lot less than the average $25,000 to $60,000 we spend each
year per prisoner. People of Asheville smoke marijuana for instance,
and even though I do not smoke, I feel that the most dangerous side
effect is imprisonment."
Author Alan Elsner, advocate for the injustices of American prisons,
says that there are three things you get when you become a prison
guard: a truck, a gun and a divorce, according to Walters.
Walters describes a book by Elsner called "Gates of Injustice: The
Crisis in Americas Prisons.
"Elsner mentions a story in his book about a kid who was thrown in
jail on a 72 hour drug bust. It wasn't even a prison it was a jail,
and in that 72 hours he was sexually assaulted by someone with AIDS.
So he came out after 72 hours with a full blown case of AIDS. This
story should make everyone take a step back and think about you or
someone you know going into prison for a minor drug charge, and
basically coming out with a death sentence."
Alan Elsner heard about the book used in regards to the play and will
be attending and answering questions for the first two days of the
showing, according to Walters.
"I really didn't think too much about the prison system before this
production," Sneeten said. "I kind of considered prisons as this
distant island. I kind of had an oversimplified image of what a
penitentiary system was. I think a lot of people think the same way,
or portray their ideas of the prison system strictly based on what
the media reports."
Organizations dealing with this dilemma, will hand out materials in
the Belk lobby, so people can be proactive about the cause, and not
just go home mad at the system, according to Walters.
"Some of these stories we are bringing in front of everyone are so
overwhelming in nature," Morris said. "It will hit every one very
hard. We come close to tears during rehearsals, because we give it
all we got, and we can see the impact this play will have on the audience."
Appalshop is filming the play as an artistic portrayal of their hard
work and research, according to Morris.
"I represent all prisoners," Morris said. "I am speaking for all of
them, just as the guard and the chorus are representing their many
voices. My first line is, 'I am a prisoner. I am not one prisoner,
but many. I have one mouth that speaks many voices, and have two ears
that have heard many stories.' So basically I am a conduit for all of
the people who have been incarcerated."
"Thousand Kites" unveils the oppressive reality of the U.S. prison
system and it's effect on prisioners, guards and their familes in the
emotional production presented by Theatre UNC Asheville Stages.
"In the play 'Thousand Kites,' a kite represents a message or a
letter going in or coming out of a prison," said Scott Walters,
associate professor of drama. "The ideas and renowned work of
Appalshop show the true devastation caused by prison construction,
and the emotional and political toll burdened on rural communities,
prisoners, guards and the families of both."
Appalshop, a nonprofit-multi-disciplinary arts and education center,
based in Whitesburg, Ky., wrote the play and sent scripts to
universities. Appalshop strives to artistically expose community
problems through original films, radio, photography, books and
spoken-word. They expose destructive problems facing the nation,
according to Casey Morris, prisoner in the production.
"This play is a little different than most," Morris said. "All of our
lines are not directed towards actors in the play they are a
projected meaningful message for the audience. The play works on a
whole different perspective than most. Everything that is written in
the play, are words taken straight from the mouths of many families,
prison guards, prisoners and communities. We are acting real life."
In 1999, AppalShop with the collaboration of DJs Amelia Kirby and
Nick Szuberla, began the idea of exposing America's prison crisis
through a hip-hop radio show near the Supermax prison Wallens Ridge
State Prison in Whitesburg, Ky., according to Appalshop.
"Through Kirby and Szuberlas' radio show, called 'Holler to the
Hood,' poems and letters to and from the inmates of the nearby
Wallens Ridge State Prison, as well as letters from local families
and community members began flooding in," Walters said. "They pulled
all of this information together and created a play from the actual
works of inmates, guards and their families."
Scott Walters works as a teacher in a N.C. division of prisons. He
teaches a drama production course and a literature course to inmates
convicted of everything from armed robbery and murder to sexual
assault. He worked with an inmate who burnt his elementary school
down, according to Walters.
"I have been teaching in a N.C. prison for about six years," Walters
said. "The course I tought a class focused on Joseph Campbell's ideas
about the heroes journey.
Used as an application to the inmates' own lives, they see their time
in prison not as a wasteland of waiting until they get out, but as a
thought provoking experience in which they are challenged. Hopefully
when they leave they will bring wisdom back to the community. I try
to get them to look at their experience in the prison as being
something that is preparing them for a positive outlook when they go
back home."
UNC Asheville hosts the first ever production of this play in the
nation, which will eventually perform in many professional theaters
all over the country, according to Walters.
"The play itself is supposed to have a lot of audience interaction,"
said Brian Sneeden, assistant director and double major in drama and
creative writing. "Thousand
Kites is broken up into three parts. The first part is the actual
performance written by Donna Porterfield, where a prisoner, guard and
five chorus members speak out. There are two parents of both the
prisoner, guard and also one voice representing a community. The
first act is the script play which lasts about 45 minutes, followed
by a 15-minute intermission. The unique second act is the showing of
the documentary film 'Up the Ridge', a harsh reality documentary
about the effects of the building of the Wallens Ridge Supermax
prison just outside of Whitesburg, Ky, created by Appalshop with the
help of Kirby. The third act is then an open discussion with the audience."
The play runs the gambit from anger to sadness to humor. There are
funny stories about prison food, tricks played on guards and music
written by Appalshop, according to Walters.
"The ultimate goal is to raise awareness, Walters said. "I think most
of us have a vague idea about prison, and believe the people in there
ought to be there, and they probably have it pretty good. The more
research we have done, we have found this to be far deeper than what
one may think."
This is not a play designed like political theater telling people
what to think. It is rather a play that raises questions and asks
people to empathize with the situation, according to Walters
"I think the questions raised are 'Is this the best way to deal with
crime?'" Sneeden said. "15 prisons have been built each year for the
past 20 years. All of that is derived from Nixon's first initiation
of instilling 'political toughness on crime', which was his campaign
slogan. As a result we have the birth of the prison industrial
complex, or the privatization of prisons as a corporation. A huge
concern with the prison system is the privatization of prisons, such
as the Wallens Ridge State Prison shown in the documentary.
Communities buy a prison, rent it to the state and then pay a yearly
fee, increasing income into the community. This is a multi-million
dollar industry. Prisons are now more business-oriented."
The Avery-Mitchell Correctional Facility shows how prisons put in
rural environments make communities dependant on them, according to
Sneeten. The people want to work there due to the higher wages in
comparison to poorly paid jobs of the community.
"One of the most important issues touched on by this play is how
these prisons, primarily built in rural communities, harm the
community," Walters said. "The Supermax prisons are usually built in
economically depressed towns. The state sees it as a way to
economically bolster the town. The minute this happens, all of these
people take jobs there. They become stressed out due to the
conditions they are working in, and suddenly there is an upswing in
alcoholism, substance abuse and domestic violence."
Since 1987, prison population has risen from under one million to
almost three million, due to sentencing guidelines, elimination of
parole and the three strikes you're out policy, according to Walters
"I think the people will come out with far more awareness of how the
prison system actually works," Sneeten said. "The play will show how
the fundamental system may not be the most appropriate, and certainly
not an efficient system for punishing certain rehabilitating criminals."
50 percent of people in the federal prison system, and 49 percent in
the state prison system are there on drug charges, according to the
U.S. Department of Justice.
"We must think if this is really an effective way to deal with this,"
Sneeten said. "If we sent people to a rehabilitation center, it would
cost a lot less than the average $25,000 to $60,000 we spend each
year per prisoner. People of Asheville smoke marijuana for instance,
and even though I do not smoke, I feel that the most dangerous side
effect is imprisonment."
Author Alan Elsner, advocate for the injustices of American prisons,
says that there are three things you get when you become a prison
guard: a truck, a gun and a divorce, according to Walters.
Walters describes a book by Elsner called "Gates of Injustice: The
Crisis in Americas Prisons.
"Elsner mentions a story in his book about a kid who was thrown in
jail on a 72 hour drug bust. It wasn't even a prison it was a jail,
and in that 72 hours he was sexually assaulted by someone with AIDS.
So he came out after 72 hours with a full blown case of AIDS. This
story should make everyone take a step back and think about you or
someone you know going into prison for a minor drug charge, and
basically coming out with a death sentence."
Alan Elsner heard about the book used in regards to the play and will
be attending and answering questions for the first two days of the
showing, according to Walters.
"I really didn't think too much about the prison system before this
production," Sneeten said. "I kind of considered prisons as this
distant island. I kind of had an oversimplified image of what a
penitentiary system was. I think a lot of people think the same way,
or portray their ideas of the prison system strictly based on what
the media reports."
Organizations dealing with this dilemma, will hand out materials in
the Belk lobby, so people can be proactive about the cause, and not
just go home mad at the system, according to Walters.
"Some of these stories we are bringing in front of everyone are so
overwhelming in nature," Morris said. "It will hit every one very
hard. We come close to tears during rehearsals, because we give it
all we got, and we can see the impact this play will have on the audience."
Appalshop is filming the play as an artistic portrayal of their hard
work and research, according to Morris.
"I represent all prisoners," Morris said. "I am speaking for all of
them, just as the guard and the chorus are representing their many
voices. My first line is, 'I am a prisoner. I am not one prisoner,
but many. I have one mouth that speaks many voices, and have two ears
that have heard many stories.' So basically I am a conduit for all of
the people who have been incarcerated."
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