Josh MacPhee

Teach or Go To Jail

Josh MacPhee

Teach or Go To Jail

Date

2021

Media

Digital print, Risograph

Binding

Saddle, Stapled

Format

Artist Book

Dimensions

12 × 9.5 in

Pages

96

Location

Brooklyn, NY

Publisher

Pound the Pavement

Printer

Eureka! House

Enclosure

Portfolio

$ 25.00

Unavailable


View Collectors

Bucknell University

Colgate University

Massachusetts College of Art and Design (MASSART)

School of the Art Institute of Chicago

University of California, Irvine (UCI)

Yale University, Robert B. Haas Family Arts Library

Teach or Go to Jail! is a multi-faceted look back on a 1977 public school teachers’ strike in Franklin, Massachusetts. Through a series of publications and printed ephemera, Josh MacPhee attempts to unpack the strike and engage with questions about what it can tell us about labor and education struggles today. MacPhee traces his family connection to the strike via his father, who as treasurer of the union was sentenced to jail time for refusing to go back to work. The publication reproduces a notebook of drawings the elder MacPhee made from his cell, press and photo documentation of the strike, ephemera, as well as a new interview done with three of the strikers. In many ways, a blip in the history of labor unrest in the US, this publication argues the importance of the strike should not be underestimated—not only was it the first strike in modern US history where the rank and file were jailed for refusing to work, but because the union held strong, built solid relationships with the community, and ultimately won almost all of their demands.

Teach or Go to Jail! includes a 60 page, 8-color risograph printed booklet (comprised of analysis, an interview, a timeline of the strike, press and photo reproductions, and documentation of strike ephemera), a 24-page reproduction of an artist notebook, a reproduction of a 6-page corner-stapled info packet originally distributed to parents by the union, and a sticker sheet featuring a bumper sticker and buttons used as part of the strike campaign. All of this is packaged in a pressboard folder with a reproduction of MacPhee’s jail property tag on the cover.