Jean Trounstine
Jean Trounstine is an activist, author and professor emerita at Middlesex Community College in Lowell, Massachusetts, USA.
Early life and education
Jean Trounstine, the daughter of Henry Philip and Amy Joseph Trounstine, grew up in Cincinnati, Ohio. She attended Walnut Hills High School (Cincinnati, Ohio), a public college-preparatory high school. She graduated with a B.A. in theater with honors from Beloit College in 1965, and an M.F.A. in acting from Brandeis University in 1973. She began her career as an actress, pursued films and theater in California and has performed in 30 plays.Teaching and activism
Trounstine taught high school English in Duxbury, Massachusetts, and at Nashoba Regional High School before joining the faculty at Middlesex Community College (Massachusetts) in 1989. In 1987, she began teaching and piloted work with women, directing plays at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Framingham for almost ten years. She co-founded the women's branch of Changing Lives Through Literature in 1992 with Judge Joseph Dever, First Justice of the Lynn District Court. Probationers, probation officers, judges and professors sit in a classroom together and discuss books. CLTL costs less than $500 a person and proponents say that it saves the government tens of thousands of dollars when compared with the cost of housing a prisoner. A recidivism study of the program by Russell Schutt, a University of Massachusetts professor, showed that it helps to reduce a return to crime. In 2008, after Trounstine met Karter Reed, who was incarcerated in an adult prison for murder that he committed at age 16, she began researching juvenile justice.Other writing
Her writing on prison issues has been published in Working Woman magazine, The Southwest Review, The Boston Globe Magazine, Huffington Post and many other publications in the US. They include:- "The Memory We Call Home", The Best Women's Travel Writing 2008, Travelers' Tales
- "Revisiting Sacred Spaces", Performing New Lives: Prison Theatre, 2011
- "Three Strikes and You're Out", Metrowest Daily News, January 1, 2012
- "A Gift from Prison", Solstice, fall/winter 2012
- "Locked Up With Nowhere to Go", Boston, July 2013
- "Rose", in Essays on Teaching", 2013
- "Keep Kids Out of Handcuffs", Truthout, May 2015
- "Changing Women's Lives Through Literature", Women's Review of Books, May–June 2015
- "A Year of Disaster At Old Colony: Suicide Attempts, Self-Harm, and COVID", DIGBos, May 2021