RT Book T1 Dance in chains: political imprisonment in the modern world A1 Kenney, Padraic 1963- LA English PP New York, NY PB Oxford University Press YR 2017 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/881555746 AB "What part does the imprisoned activist play in the conflict between regimes and their opponents around the world? Political incarceration today seems to offer the clearest evidence of a repressive regime, and of a determined political opposition. Yet surely there are more effective alternatives, for both states and their opponents, than incarceration. Imprisoned opponents, like those of the African National Congress in South Africa, or of Solidarity in Poland, or of the Irish Republican Army in Northern Ireland, may eventually claim or share power, while those who are executed or exiled will not pose the same threat. From the opposition's point of view, imprisonment, even though it deprives the movement of a valued contributor, is often a badge of honor. Our perceptions of political prisoners are awash in clichés and archetypes. We think of Nelson Mandela, or perhaps Václav Havel: good men, engaged in a moral struggle. But can that really be an acceptable definition, when Adolph Hitler too was a political prisoner? Can we understand what political prisoners are and what they do if we do not include those whose goals or ethics are different from our own? Dance in Chains--the title inspired by a song composed by a socialist on death row in a Warsaw prison 120 years ago--draws upon research in Poland, Ireland, South Africa and includes over a dozen different regimes over the last 150 years. These cases serve as pillars holding up a global investigation of the phenomenon. In each case, generations of political opponents have gone to prison since at least the turn of the twentieth century. Yet they also vary widely. Taken together, they yield a sufficiently wide spectrum to allow the reader to understand one of the central characters of modern political history"--Provided by publisher AB Introduction: Where a free man can abide with honor -- "But I have no wish to be discharged" : when imprisonment became political -- Night and fog : the regime and its prisoners -- "Everyone learned prison" : becoming a political prisoner -- "You have the consolation of being very much in the fight" : the cause in prison -- "How to free your prisoner" : the personal and the political of international prisoner support -- "A close-knit group, chosen with care" : community and order in the political camp and prison -- "I was confusing the prison" : the contest in the cell -- "Why wouldn't I laugh, when I win either way?" : the hunger strike -- "This purgatory is useful" : how prison forges politics -- Conclusion: The politics of prisoners' stories -- Epilogue: "Nobody survives Guantanamo" : a political prison today -- Notes -- Archives consulted NO Includes bibliographical references (pages 283-322) -- Includes bibliographical references and index CN HV8706 SN 9780199375745 K1 Political prisoners : History K1 Imprisonment : Political aspects : History K1 Dissenters : History K1 Political prisoners : Poland : History K1 Political prisoners : Northern Ireland : History K1 Political prisoners : South Africa : History K1 World Politics : 1900-1945 K1 World Politics : 1945-1989 K1 World Politics : 1989- K1 Political prisoners : History : Poland K1 Political prisoners : History : Northern Ireland K1 Political prisoners : History : South Africa K1 Politischer Gefangener : Geschichte