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Lockdown By Evans D. Hopkins

Decent Essays

Lockdown by Evans D. Hopkins Lockdown starts out as the quintessential prison story: the prison is in lockdown, the prisoners are punished. There is even a hostage situation, prisoner suicides, and angry, mean guards who put the prisoners down. As a reader, my first thought was of the TV show Prison Break. My next was of the movie The Shawshank Redemption. From the first line about guards “wearing armored vests and riot helmets taking a head count” I categorized, assumed, and wholeheartedly stereotyped the essay. But then, suddenly, I stopped. As if someone had flicked a switch in my brain, a quick movement similar to that of someone snapping their fingers, my perception changed. The change in my understanding and comprehension of Hopkins’ …show more content…

For one, it had the ability to shock me out of the presumed complacency I had assumed from the beginning of the essay. I appreciated the chance to have my views changed and my assumptions challenged. This essay challenged me to think about other issues and perspectives of prison, rather than the widespread media ideas about it. Moreover, I appreciated the thoughts and idea Hopkins introduced in his essay. His opinions about prisons and their changes (over a relatively short period of time) are actually incredibly important. If the trend of just “giving up” on prisoners continues, negative effects will be seen throughout our country and society. As Hopkins says, many officials and members of the government want prison to have negative connotations. They want the threat of prison to keep people from committing crimes. However, as Hopkins explains, not only is this plan not working, but it’s also keeping prisoners from having the chance of rehabilitation, parole, and education. The removal if these institutions from the prison system is defining prison as the “last stop”, giving prisoners no chance of release or the ability to change their lives around. There is a litany of problems with this, but the main one is the loss of hope and expectations prisoners receive, and the removal of a second chance. By exploring these issues, Hopkins is confronting concepts and ideals most Americans would rather not think about, and forcing them to challenge their preconceived notions about the prison system, as well as what it means for a person to be sent into

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