Visions of Prisons
About the Author
Reviews
"Visions of Prisons shows how carceral violence haunts former conflict zones in Northern Ireland, East Germany, and beyond. Adroitly weaving together personal and historical accounts, Michael Welch takes readers on a tour of memorials, museums exhibits, and urban architecture to theorize the tenacious imprint of punitive imaginations. The book illustrates how instead of providing security, separation walls and surveillance practices are more likely to breed conflict, fear, and paranoia."—Torin Monahan, author of Crisis Vision: Race and the Cultural Production of Surveillance
"With Visions of Prisons, Michael Welch has achieved a rare feat, providing a genuinely fresh and engaging study of an institution that is very familiar but very difficult to see in a new light. It is the final installment of a trilogy and here the comparative method is used in deft case studies of Northern Ireland and Berlin, indicating how the remnants of wars, walls, and watching inform larger techniques of social control, surveillance, and containment. The book is a penetrating and disturbing dissection of visual control in and beyond post-conflict societies. It is essential reading for anyone who cares about understanding the contours of penal power and is a book that lingers long in the memory."—Eamonn Carrabine, Professor of Sociology and Criminology, University of Essex
“Visions of Prisons is the capstone work of a monumental trilogy. Michael Welch uncovers the paradoxes and terrors of observation, walls, and control not only with analytic insight but also with interpretative compassion. This is a landmark for cultural criminology today.”—Philip Smith, author of Punishment and Culture
