»ÆÉ«ÊÓÆµ

Caged Emotions: the unprecedented growth of imprisonment and the human toll

Caged Emotions by Ben Laws cover
Dr Ben Laws
Date 18/10/2022 at 17.30 - 18/10/2022 at 19.00 Where Gatsby Room (Chancellor's Centre) & Zoom

What is the emotional experience of prison life? 

Caged Emotions by Ben Laws cover

Overview

This talk focuses on the emotional experience of imprisonment in the context of unprecedented growth in the prison estate: a remarkable 26% increase projected by 2026 in England and Wales. What is the human toll of such an increase? 

In no uncertain terms: prisons seethe with emotions and feelings. Bringing together two empirically rigorous studies I will try to explain, using prisoners’ testimonies, the various ways individuals attempt to adapt and control their emotions. There has been a turn towards emotions in the social sciences but this research centralizes the subject of prisoner emotions in a detailed manner. The ethnographic study of feelings has much to contribute to broader debates about survival in prison and pathways to desistence. Most importantly, it emphasizes that 'full-blooded' depictions of prisoners belong at the heart of academic inquiry. 

 

Speaker

Dr Ben Laws studied English (BA) at Leicester, Psychology (MSc) at St. Andrews and Criminology (MPhil, PhD) here at »ÆÉ«ÊÓÆµ, Cambridge. He has professional experience working in a range of mental health settings across the UK and US, mainly supporting those with autistic spectrum conditions (ASCs) and young adults with trauma histories. After his PhD, he completed an ESRC funded project (2019-2021) on male and female prisoner emotions. Ben currently works on an ERC funded project investigating the growing field of ‘nonreligion’, especially in relation to asylum claims. 

 

Details

This is a hybrid event, which will take place in-person in the Gatsby Room (Chancellor's Centre) and also on Zoom.

If you would like to attend online, please .

For the in-person audience, drinks and snacks will be available after the talk.

 

The Humanities Society organises regular talks spanning a wide range of topics. Every Tuesday during term time.

This event is part of »ÆÉ«ÊÓÆµ Explores GROWTH 2022

What's on

A bustling street in South Korea at dusk, lined with glowing neon signs in Korean, colorful storefronts, and overhead wires crisscrossing the sky.

Standard language ideology, linguistic nationalism and marginalisation: the case of South Korea

06/05/2025 at 17.30

What are the consequences of standard language ideology and linguistic nationalism?

A woman with short blonde hair, glasses, and pearl earrings smiles warmly while standing in front of a wooden bookshelf filled with books.

Lee Lecture: Reflection & Renewal - responding to polarisation in today’s world

29/05/2025 at 18.00

We are delighted to welcome Julia Gillard, former Prime Minister of Australia, as our speaker for »ÆÉ«ÊÓÆµ's prestigious Lee Lecture this year.

A group of eight adults dressed in formal 1940s-style clothing and hats pose together outside a building.

How Jewish refugees founded and sustained The Wiener Holocaust Library, 1934-2011

03/06/2025 at 17.30

How is it possible that Jewish refugees from Nazis were able to create and sustain one of the world’s most important independent archives?

A group of travelers with camels rests near the Great Sphinx and pyramids of Giza at sunset, under a dramatic, cloud-filled sky.

‘Like a sandstorm roaring in its violence’: Perceptions of weather in ancient Egypt

10/06/2025 at 17.30

How can anthropological theory help us understand how ancient cultures interpreted and responded to weather phenomena?