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Sensory Penalties

Sensory Penalties - a new book written by alumna Kate Herrity

  • Date08 February 2021

Alumna Kate Herrity (Sociology and Criminology 2014) has co-written a new book exploring sensory experience in places of confinement.

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Sensory Penalities: Exploring the Senses in Places of Punishment and Social Control has been published in Eformat and hardback and is the first in the series Emerald Studies in Culture, Criminal Justice and the Arts.

Sensory Penalities reflects an explosion in explorations of the sensory and disrupts conventional expectations of both form and focus by expanding anthropological practices and craft into the field of criminology and criminological research.

In providing accounts of physical/sensorial experiences within sites of surveillance and control, the authors in this edited collection bring elements of research experiences (often absent from existing work) to the fore; the impressions and sensual experiences which remain forever in field notes. In so doing they carve out spaces to consider these places and the ways in which they are theorised anew.

The book aims to explore what sensory aspects of experience mean to those engaged in such research, and how they can shape our criminological thinking. What are the sensory textures of these experiences? What do they tell us? How do we communicate them? Finally, what does consideration of these elements tell us about penality? 

This timely volume challenges and remakes assumptions about what criminology is and should be; more accurately reflecting the post-disciplinary nature of the field. Read more about the book and purchase here

Kate also moderates an accompanying blog - www.sensorypenalities.com and is extending themes from her thesis in current research projects in her role as Andrew W. Mellon and Kings College Cambridge Junior Research Fellow in Punishment. 

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