Congregate Literacy
This is not a literacy acquisition narrative, but literacy is its recurring theme: Maroney, a farmer turned businessman by trade, could read and write before he was imprisoned. But Maroney takes a keen interest in prisoners’ illicit communication networks, contrasts prison schools in two influential early national penitentiaries, and increasingly documents his own reading practices. With its detailed focus on prison discipline and prisoners’ efforts to circumvent authority, Maroney’s Narrative usefully demonstrates how prison reform practices, especially those that restricted inmate writing and reading, generated creative literacy responses by inmates, from reading smuggled texts to composing poems and committing verse to memory to circumvent writing bans. And by emphasizing the impact of a former inmate’s published exposé upon his own fate, Maroney’s Narrative usefully demonstrates a practice I name “congregate literacy”—the process by which one inmate’s literacy acts inspire other prisoners’ literacy acts. Ultimately, my reading cautions us not to draw too fine a line between hidden literacy and public print culture.