Sunday, October 13, 2019
The Queer Prison Abolitionist Movement Essay -- Prison Abolitionist, I
It would be misguided to discuss queer prison abolitionist movements without first thoroughly examining the place of the prison system in the neoliberal imperial project of enemy production (both inside and outside the boundaries of the state). The contemporaneous production of exterior and interior enemies (terrorists and criminals respectively), movement toward and legislation for ostensible (and, importantly, homonormative) queer ââ¬Å"equality,â⬠the criminalization of radical activism through increased surveillance, torture, disappearance, and imprisonment, and the exponential growth in the transnationally funded prison system is symptomatic of what, in the article ââ¬Å"Intimate Investments,â⬠Anna M. Agathangelou, M. Daniel Bassichis, and Tamara L. Spira deem the ââ¬Å"imperial project(s) of promise and nonpromiseâ⬠(Agathangelou, Bassichis, and Spira 120). Agathangelou, Bassichis, and Spira argue that, inherently a part of empireââ¬â¢s promises to some groups of safety and inclusion in global capitalism is a process of othering by which other groups are constructed as ââ¬Å"enemy others,â⬠and by which yet other groups are rendered ââ¬Å"ââ¬Ëother Othersââ¬â¢ whose life and death do not even merit mention or attentionâ⬠(123). At the heart of this process lies the imperialist drive to establish and protect the new world order via what M. Jacqui Alexander deems the process of ââ¬Å"incorporation and quarantiningâ⬠(Alexander qtd. in Agathangelou, Bassichis, and Spira 127). This process serves the imperialist ends of militarization by constructing ââ¬Å"enemiesâ⬠which must be contained and/or killed; it also provides a backdrop against which newly legitimized homonormative queer identities can be conceptualized. In other words, by creating classes of racially sexualized... ...plex. Eric A. Stanley and Nat Smith. 1st ed. Oakland: AK Press, 2011. 267-79. Print. Girshick, Lori. ââ¬Å"Out of Compliance: Masculine-Identified People in Womenââ¬â¢s Prisons.â⬠Captive Genders: Trans Embodiment and the Prison industrial Complex. Eric A. Stanley and Nat Smith. 1st ed. Oakland: AK Press, 2011. 189-208. Print. Nair, Yasmin. ââ¬Å"How to Make Prisons Disappear: Queer Immigrants, the Shackles of Love, and the Invisibility of the Prison Industrial Complex.â⬠Captive Genders: Trans Embodiment and the Prison industrial Complex. Eric A. Stanley and Nat Smith. 1st ed. Oakland: AK Press, 2011. 123-39. Print. Nemec, Blake. ââ¬Å"No One Enters Like Them: Health, Gender Variance, and the PIC.â⬠Captive Genders: Trans Embodiment and the Prison industrial Complex. Eric A. Stanley and Nat Smith. 1st ed. Oakland: AK Press, 2011. 217-31. Print.
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