RT Book T1 Incarcerated resistance: how identity, gender, and privilege shape the experiences of America's nonviolent activists A1 Stanger, Anya 1979- LA English PP Lanham Boulder New York London PB Lexington Books YR 2022 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1772353256 AB Justice action prisoners in the school of the Americas watch and plowshares movements -- Resistance in an imperial state: prison witness -- Like a chiropractic adjustment: aligning actions and beliefs through identity-work -- Embodiment, privilege power, and the experience of action -- Prison communities -- A visitor in someone else's house: the standpoint of justice action prisoners -- Journey through prison witness: the significance of privilege and gender. AB "Grounded in the lives of some of its most committed nonviolent activists, Incarcerated Resistance tells a story of anti-war resistance, what it means to "go to jail for justice" in the contemporary United States, and shows how identity matters in both the activation of prison witness, and as a key shaper of individual experience"-- NO Includes bibliographical references and index CN HM1281 SN 9781793605610 K1 Passive resistance : United States K1 Civil Disobedience : United States K1 Peace Movements : United States K1 Prisoners : Political activity : United States K1 USA : Friedensbewegung : Gewaltloser Widerstand : Aktivismus : Diskriminierung : Justizvollzugsanstalt