AltaMira Press
Pages: 248
Trim: 6¾ x 9
978-0-7591-0643-7 • Paperback • June 2005 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
Rik Scarce is the author of two books, Eco-Warriors: Understanding the Radical Environmental Movement (1990) and Fishy Business: Salmon, Biology, and the Social Construction of Nature (2000). He is a professor in the Department of Sociology at Skidmore College, and previously taught at Michigan State University and Montana State University. He has also been a newspaper reporter, worked as an aide to two politicians, and has done research and writing for a consulting firm.
1 Foreword
2 Acknowledgements
3 Cast of Characters and Glossary
4 Chapter 1: A Sense of Justice
5 Chapter 2: Kicking Uncle Sam's Ass
6 Chapter 3: Find Me Some Amendments
7 Chapter 4: The Meaning of Devotion
8 Chapter 5: I'd Gladly Die Right Now
9 Chapter 6: Joint Joints
10 Chapter 7: A Final Rollup
11 Chapter 8: Some Things Do Not Come to Pass
12 About the Author
Contempt of Court is the story of one man's 'constitutional struggle,' as Rik Scarce puts it, a fight in support of the First Amendment, but an intensely personal struggle as well. His journey to and through jail is a moving study in courage and American ideals in practice. Anyone interested in the darker side of our criminal justice system, and in the lives of all those who are locked in our jails, will find in Contempt of Court a first-hand account like none other.
— Richard A. Leo, University of California, Irvine
Books dealing with life in prison typically have relied on interviews or questionnaires administered by social scientists or informal descriptions by prisoners who are not social scientists. This book by sociologist Rik Scarce bridges this gap with a penetrating ethnographic analysis based on his 159 days of incarceration, occasioned by his refusal to identify the subjects used in his dissertation. He brings the prison situation to life to a degree that few have been able to achieve.
— John F. Galliher, Missouri University-Columbia