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The Collaborative International Dictionary
jailbird

jailbird \jail"bird`\, jail bird \jail" bird`\ A prisoner; one is in prison or who has been confined in prison. [Slang]

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
jailbird

1610s, based on an image of a caged bird; from jail (n.) + bird (n.1).

Wiktionary
jailbird

n. A prisoner or an ex-prisoner

WordNet
jailbird

n. a person serving a sentence in a jail or prison [syn: convict, con, inmate, gaolbird]

Wikipedia
Jailbird

Jailbird is a novel by Kurt Vonnegut, originally published in 1979; it is regarded as Kurt Vonnegut's " Watergate novel." The plot involves elements that include the U.S. labor movement of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the dialectical back-and-forth of labor and management, Marxism and capitalism in the 1930's and 1940's, even up to the imperiousness of the Nixon administration. Jailbird revolves around Walter F. Starbuck, a man recently released from a minimum-security prison in Georgia after serving time for his comically small role in the Watergate Scandal. Jailbird is written as a standard memoir, revealing Starbuck's present situation, then coming full circle to tell the story of his first two days after being released from prison.

Through Walter F. Starbuck (and near-rambling biographical sketches of the various characters referenced in the novel) Jailbird concerns itself primarily with the history of the American labor movement, while exposing the more egregious flaws of corporate America, the American political system, the Red Scare/McCarthyistic histrionics of the late 1950's and early 1960's, and both capitalistic and communistic theory.

Jailbird, as a novel, introduced Vonnegut's fictitious mega-corporation, RAMJAC. Vonnegut humorously suggested that RAMJAC owned 19% of all businesses in the United States of America at its zenith. Throughout the novel, whenever a business is mentioned, Vonnegut frequently mentions RAMJAC in a parenthetical comment: such as, "Manufacturers Hanover Trust Company (A RAMJAC Corporation)." RAMJAC may have been Vonnegut's response to mega-corporations' undue and or unsavory influence over television advertisements common around the time of the novel's publication (1979), in which they would routinely detail the many familiar brand names under their corporate umbrella.

Jailbird also features a brief cameo by Kilgore Trout, a recurring, fan-favorite Vonnegutian character known for writing science fiction novels and bizarre short-stories. However, in this unique appearance, "Kilgore Trout" is revealed to be the pseudonym of a character in prison, deliberately contradicting the autobiographical details of Trout's life as delineated in both earlier and subsequent Vonnegut novels, as Vonnegut began to flirt with the unreliable narrator mechanism so en vogue by the late '70s and '80s.

Usage examples of "jailbird".

Want your flaky friends giving galas for jailbirds with a tax writeoff helping the blacks without getting their hands dirty same thing Liz, your brother and his greasy Buddhists same God damn thing.

But I'd forgotten that, just like the aristocratic blue bloods of America have forgotten what they learned in history--that most of their ancestors were the riffraff of Europe--thieves, jailbirds, beggars, and outcasts.

They've put some pride into Jamie Farquhar, and maybe into some of those jailbirds out there too.

It was my only chance to save Roger and myself and bring those jailbirds to justice.