Grantee Database

POETIC JUSTICE INCORPORATED

Grant Year

2023-24

Grant Program

Impact Projects

Award Amount

$25,000.00

Project Description

With a CAC Impact grant, Dr. Reka Barton, a Postdoctoral Faculty Fellow at USD and expert in Visual Methodology, will collaborate with Poetic Justice to provide a critical component to the exhibition: a dialogic arts education experience, rooted in Freirean pedagogies, that activates communities through intentional engagement.

In early 2023, NEA-funded PJ arts educators, a professional photographer, and 15 incarcerated members of the team at CIW collaborated on a museum-quality multimedia exhibition of 15 outsized self-portrait photographs (5’ x 7’ on average), poetry, and QR codes that link audience members to incarcerated artists, speaking about their artistic process and reading their poetry. The exhibit opened inside the prison in March 2023 and will tour in the Southern California region throughout 2023 and 2024, with opportunities for community engagement through videography and visual thinking.

Organization Summary

Poetic Justice offers gender responsive and trauma informed classes in the following California carceral settings:
– CIW: 2 RAC classes/wk
– CIW: Children’s Literature Project, ongoing study, production, and publication of children’s books about incarcerated motherhood
– CCWF: 2 RAC classes/wk (including the high security 503 unit)
– CIW & CCWF:
———- Distance Learning Program
———- Voices on the Inside – ongoing self-portrait poetry and photography program with community exhibitions
———- Reentry Journal Project – ongoing paid stipend for first 12 weeks on parole
– Las Colinas (SD Jail): 3 classes/wk (mainline, high security, and psychiatric units)
– SD Youth Transitional Center: 1 weekly class for girls 12-19 y/o

Other PJ Work in California
– East Mesa Rehabilitation Program: (men’s facility)
– California Model Working Group Leadership Team
– Transitional Programming Works (TPW) Women’s Subcommittee Leadership Team

A typical weekly class provides gender-diverse and sensitive access by incorporating mindful breathing, trauma-responsive programming, community support, creative writing, and therapeutic visual arts.

For example, participants might explore aspects of anxiety, worthlessness, shame, etc. through poetry’s grapho-motor process within a trusted community engaged in evidence-based healing because putting language to the unspeakable supports healing from root causes of trauma and PTSD, and provides pathways forward. Whereas abuse, depression, and addiction damage language centers, poetry reactivates them. In fact research indicates that poetry (rhythm, metaphor, rhyme) activates the right hemisphere. The left brain is responsible for acquisition and expression, but the right brain’s ability to integrate unrelated concepts into comprehensible metaphor with repetition and syncopation can access language pathways damaged by trauma. Research, including JW Pennebaker’s work, shows “writing about upsetting events improves physical and mental health,” but only by creating safe communities for interoception and embodied agency. The traumatized brain doesn’t remember in logical sequences; trauma memory returns in sensory experiences rooted in the limbic system rather than language centers – this is why poetry is consequential for healing.

Organization

Poetic Justice

Address

PO Box 3997

San Diego

92163

County

San Diego

Region

Far South

Phone

(619) 881-7334

Congressional District

53

State Assembly District

San Diego 78th

State Senate District

San Diego 39th

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