In the popular imagination, the female criminal/prisoner is a figure of curiosity and intrigue. Hidden behind male prisoners, partners in their lives and/or crimes, the female prisoner is made invisible, or she is memorialised a grotesque and demonic figure, one who has transgressed the legal, normative, and moral boundaries of social life.
Women, Incarcerated pierces through this invisibilisation/memorialisation paradox to shine the spotlight squarely on the lived experiences of women prisoners.
The book shows how the prison and the State act as extensions of the family and community in dealing with women seen as deviants. Through a focus on both the everyday and the extraordinary aspects of imprisoned women’s lives, the chapters narrate the experiences of exclusion, marginalisation, and violence in the lives of women prisoners. The book also highlights their negotiations with and resistance to penal power.
The volume also initiates, for the first time, a dialogue between researchers, practitioners, and activists to raise some critical questions: How is the prison as an organisation gendered? In what ways do the threat and the actual use of violence feature in the management, control, and treatment of female prisoners? Is it possible to trace narrative continuities between female prisoners' experience of prison life and their experiences outside the prison?
The book illustrates the collapse and remaking of everyday life in prison, revealed through narrative accounts focusing on the travails of women prisoners, the formation of meaningful relationships within prison, and how art helps to retain the dignity and humanity of prisoners. Such a dialogue can further enable collaborative reflections on building humane prisons.
Mahuya Bandyopadhyay is Associate Professor, Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi.
Rimple Mehta is Lecturer, School of Social Sciences, Western Sydney University.
List of Abbreviations Acknowledgements
Introduction Carceral Logics, Gender Justice, and Resistance MAHUYA BANDYOPADHYAY AND RIMPLE MEHTA Part I: Narratives of Resistance 1. The Dark Night of the Soul Survival and Despair in Prison ‘Diaries’ UMA CHAKRAVARTI
2. 64 Days in Lalbazar Anatomy of a Torture Narrative SHARMILA PURKAYASTHA
3. Narratives of Confinement, Harm and Resistance MAHUYA BANDYOPADHYAY Part II: Confronting Institutional Spaces 4. Women, Crime, and Punishment Indian Rhetoric and Realities SHEREEN SADIQ
5. The Many Tales of ‘Love’ Prison, Survival, and Resistance KANUPRIYA SHARMA
6. Gender and Prison Structures A Study of Two Women’s Prisons in Maharashtra SADAF MODAK
7. Time is on My Side Negotiating Space and Time in Prison RIMPLE MEHTA
8. Governmentality and Contestations Experiences of Women Recidivists in Mumbai MANGALA HONAWAR AND VIJAY RAGHAVAN Part III: Humane Prisons?: Challenges of Governance 9. Redesigning Women’s Prisons for Correction UPNEET LALLI
10. Impact of Pre-Trial Detention on Women MADHURIMA DHANUKA
11. Culture Therapy in Prison Trials and Tribulations B. D. SHARMA
12. Where Do We Go from Here? Re-examining Incarceration as a Response to Crime PENELOPE TONG Notes on the Contributors Index