| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: DORINDA CARTER |
| April 17, 2008 |
615-741-1000, EXT. 8144 (OFFICE) |
|
877-909-5128 (PAGER) |
GREAT BOOKS IN TENNESSEE PRISONS
NASHVILLE, Tenn. - A partnership
between the Department of Correction, Middle Tennessee State University
and the Great Books Foundation is allowing inmates at three Tennessee
prisons to take part in regular discussions of great books. The
program, entitled Great Books in Middle Tennessee Prisons, is currently
underway at the Riverbend Maximum Security Institution, the Lois M.
DeBerry Special Needs Facility and the Tennessee Prison for Women.
The program began in January of this year, when Dr.
Daniel Born of the Great Books Foundation, based in Chicago, visited
several Tennessee institutions with TDOC Education Director Sharmila
Patel. "We described the need for programs like Great Books
in our prison," said Patel. "The reading and discussion
of great books expands our educational opportunities for incarcerated
men and women. It enlarges minds and creates a sense of
community."
One inmate described the reading class as one of the
most illuminating experiences he's had. "I've been
incarcerated for 24 years and this class is one that I will carry with
me forever," he said.
With a grant funded by MTSU, Dr. Philip Edwards
Phillips, Associate Professor of English, and five of his colleagues
have been leading regular discussions of great books at the
prisons. "This program provides motivated prisoners with the
kind of intellectual stimulation that is sorely lacking in many of the
nation's prisons," said Dr. Born.
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