Silence Did Not Signal Consent
How silence moves through families, institutions, and systems — not as absence, but as architecture.
Christopher H. Conn
It moves through families, institutions, religion, schools, courts, and systems — often without ever asking permission. These essays examine the structures that manufacture consent and the cost of reclaiming it.
Six frameworks for understanding how authority operates — and what it costs.
How silence moves through families, institutions, and systems — not as absence, but as architecture.
The essay that became the book. On power, permission, and what happens when the language for refusal has been removed.
Nashville, family systems, and the machinery that manufactures consent through displacement.
A mother's Alzheimer's, postpartum depression, and what silence deposits in the body when language fails.
Kenneth Frazier, federal prison, and the collapse of narrative systems that were never yours to begin with.
The counterfeiter is the most honest product of a system built on counterfeiting.
How The Sun and Guernica teach through what they withhold — and what editorial restraint reveals about power.
A four-essay reading path through the central arguments.
The comprehensive examination of how silence operates as architecture — through families, institutions, and systems.
The core argument. What happens when the language for refusal has been removed.
Nashville, displacement, and the machinery that manufactures consent through family systems.
What silence deposits in the body when language fails. The personal made structural.
A memoir about power, silence, and the institutions that shape identity.
From evangelical schools to federal prison to rebuilding behavioral-health systems, this work explores how authority assumes consent — and how individuals reclaim agency when every structure around them has been designed to prevent exactly that.