Prison in SF: Difference between revisions
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==Prisoner/Prison-keeper psychology== | ==Prisoner/Prison-keeper psychology== | ||
* [[The Red Rose | * [[The Red Rose Rages (Bleeding)]] by [[L. Timmel Duchamp]] | ||
* [[Susan R. Matthews]]' [[Jurisdiction Universe]] stories, featuring [[Andrej Koskiusko]] as official torturer; particularly number two, which takes place on a prison planet | * [[Susan R. Matthews]]' [[Jurisdiction Universe]] stories, featuring [[Andrej Koskiusko]] as official torturer; particularly number two, which takes place on a prison planet | ||
Revision as of 09:19, 9 May 2008
SF provides a rich field for examination of prisons, prisoners, and the psychology of imprisonment, from alternatives to penal servitude, to examining Earth-like penal colonies and prison systems in other settings.
Women in prison
A whole genre of its own. See women in prison.
Penal colonies
Penal colonies are common, as a device for creating a settlement, as an examination of class issues, and as a way to create a dystopic, lawless environment. Works include:
- Movies such as Escape from New York and sequels, in which some cities have been abandoned to criminals and walled off as prisons
- Worlds established as prison colonies, such as the world in Illicit Passage by Alice Nunn; the movie Alien 3; and "Borders of Infinity" by Lois McMaster Bujold.
Prison rescues
Prison revolts
- Illicit Passage by Alice Nunn (not so much a functioning prison)
Prisoner/Prison-keeper psychology
- The Red Rose Rages (Bleeding) by L. Timmel Duchamp
- Susan R. Matthews' Jurisdiction Universe stories, featuring Andrej Koskiusko as official torturer; particularly number two, which takes place on a prison planet