search the archive
search the archive categoriesadministration |
writing about literature, justice, law, social changefull name / name of organization: Beth Ayer / Changing Lives Through Literature contact email: cltl@umassd.edu Changing Lives Through Literature is a nationally recognized alternative sentencing program for criminal offenders founded in 1991 on the power of literature to transform lives. CLTL sentences criminal offenders to a series of literature seminars instead of traditional probation. Studies have confirmed that program graduates are half as likely to commit additional crimes than their counterparts in the justice system. Earlier this year, we launched a new blog, Changing Lives, Changing Minds (found at http://cltl.umassd.edu/blog ), that features guest essays from professors, scholars, graduate students, and law enforcement officials in the United States and Canada. Some essays focus on Changing Lives Through Literature and other incarceration alternatives, but we are also interested in broader issues such as the transformative power of literature, reading, and writing. We are especially interested in featuring perspectives from up and coming scholars around the country. We would like to invite you to submit a 500-900 word piece to be featured on the site. Any topic that deals with literature or writing and the way in which they affect individuals (now or historically), or relevant issues relating to criminal justice and alternative sentencing are fair game. You might consider using one or more of the questions below as a jumping off point for an entry or bring ideas of your own to the blog. * Is there a book that has profoundly impacted your life or way of thinking? Tell us about how you, yourself, have been transformed by a piece of literature. Visit the website at http://cltlblog.wordpress.com cfp categories: african-american american childrens_literature general_announcements humanities_computing_and_the_internet interdisciplinary journals_and_collections_of_essays popular_culture postcolonial renaissance rhetoric_and_composition theory twentieth_century_and_beyond victorian
|