Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5074285 Geoforum 2013 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper deploys a theoretical engagement with the concepts of 'public' and 'private' to explore the experience of surveilled penal space by incarcerated individuals, and in so doing further advances the new field of carceral geography. Foucault's description of self-surveillance as the mechanism through which disciplinary power or biopower operates to produce 'docile' bodies has been challenged by those who argue for the significance of prisoner agency and the importance of penal space; that socialisation mitigates the effect of biopower, and that prisoners 'perform' docility rather than interiorising it. Drawing on extensive empirical evidence gathered during interviews with women prisoners and prison staff in Russia, the paper discusses the ways in which prisoners negotiate and engage with penal spaces. It finds that even though prisoners describe penal space as 'public', they find ways of deploying agency to utilise and subvert public space to construct the 'private', and argues that a consideration of the contested binary of public/private may be a useful way of investigating prisoners' agency amidst Foucauldian disciplinary power.

► Further advances new field of carceral geography. ► Uses concept of privacy to explore prisoners' experience of space. ► Examines experience of women prisoners in Russia.

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