Josephine Metcalf

Josephine

Josephine Metcalf

Anthology Co-Editor

Josephine Metcalf is a Senior Lecturer in American Studies at the University of Hull, United Kingdom. She is the co-founder and co-director of the Cultures of Incarceration Centre and Programme Director for the MA in Incarceration Studies. Jo’s research centres on representations of gangs and prisons in a range of cultural forms and the ways in which these have been received by audiences. Her first monograph, entitled The Culture and Politics of Contemporary Street Gang Memoirs, was released in 2012 and she has co-edited two collections of essays, one on Ice-T (with Will Turner,2014) and the other on African American culture and society after Rodney King (with Carina Spaulding, 2015). She has published on the life and works of Luis J. Rodriguez, narratives by former prisoner Shaun Attwood, and Guantanamo Bay memoirs. Jo recently wrote a foreword for an anniversary edition of Joseph Bathanti’s award-winning prison novel, Coventry, and is currently working on a monograph about contemporary US prison literature as well as an edited collection on Luis J. Rodriguez with Ben Olguín from UCSB titled In the Long Run: Luis J. Rodríguez’s Life and Literary Legacy —Essays, Interviews, and Reflections, with Selected New Writings by the Author. Jo has just completed working with a group of former prisoners on a British Academy/Arts Council-funded project entitled ‘Pop-Culture, and Transatlantic Perspectives: How Former United Kingdom Prisoners Interpret American (Penal) Culture’. The project resulted in a collection of creative writings, Hope Walks by Me that Bonne Greer hailed her “book of the year” in the FT book review. Jo is part of the Learning Together network (stemming from the University of Cambridge) and during the pandemic, she delivered a cutting-edge module on ‘United States & United Kingdom Prison Culture; Redemption & Resistance’ at HMP Hull, digitally supported by specially adapted Chromebooks for the prison learners.

GLP Research Associate