Hidden Mirrors with Alan Huffman
The book club's recording ban is now in effect, and the season is drawing to a close – but the men aren't done just yet. With fewer members than usual in the room, the conversation turns to Framed, the John Grisham and Jim McCloskey expose of wrongful convictions, which has quietly rattled even these men. None of the book club members claim innocence. But the book has cracked something open. The member known as Chris2 says he's been imprisoned for seven years, yet the stories still seemed incredible and shocking to him. Willie mentions a man currently imprisoned at Wilkinson who was convicted of rape despite an alleged DNA mismatch. Dollar notes that it can take two decades to get a wrongful conviction overturned. And Justin, writing from solitary, sends a question he hands over the room: Are the people I'm incarcerated with even supposed to be here? X-man frames it as a problem of projection – the same tendency to see only what you expect to see, which he says shapes elections, policing and how anyone in an orange jumpsuit gets perceived before a word is spoken. Such prejudgments happen even in prison, he says. Dollar calls this last book club session one of the most important discussions the club has had – which makes it all the more painful that it could not be recorded – of necessity, a large part of this episode relies upon notes recounted in voiceovers. In a one-on-one recorded interview, Micharlos, meanwhile, reflects on what this whole undertaking has meant to him. He wants to be remembered as someone who helped build something here, something that gave the men an outlet and helped them get through incarceration. He expects others to feel the same. The season ends not with a tidy resolution, but with lots of questions – that, and the image of a hand holding a book over a razor wire fence – an idea for a prison tattoo that Hopper came up with for the whole group. Books mentioned: Framed, co-authored by John Grisham and Jim McCloskey Podcast funding from the McMullan-O'Connor Fund; book club sponsored by the Mississippi Humanities Council. Engineered by Jesse Naus, Shawn Jackson and Charlie Sensabaugh at Red Cayman Studios, with assistant producer Amanda Akari. Edited and hosted by Alan Huffman. Initial support and recordings provided by Management and Training Corporation, operator of the Wilkinson County Correctional Facility for the Mississippi Department of Corrections. Special thanks to Robert Connolly Farr for use of his song "Everybody's Dying."
13 episodios
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