Introduction Confinement Beyond Site: Connecting Urban and Prison Ethnographies

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2020
Journal Cambridge Anthropology
Volume | Issue number 38 | 1
Pages (from-to) 1-14
Number of pages 14
Organisations
  • Faculty of Humanities (FGw) - Centre for Latin American Research and Documentation (CEDLA)
Abstract
Recognizing that the ‘prison’ and the ‘street’ are increasingly understood to be enmeshed sites of exclusion and confinement, this introduction proposes an analytical orientation towards relations and practices across these sites, which attends specifically to the ways in which they are mutually constitutive. Utilizing notions of traversal and porosity, we push debates on confinement beyond their prison-centric impulse. This decentring of the prison goes beyond reading one site in terms of the other (the street as just another carceral space; the prison as another site of exclusion). We challenge the divisiveness of prison/street binaries and the domination of boundary-making by emphasizing the importance of polyvalent experiences and by drawing attention to the practices of people who traverse the prison/street threshold. On the basis of the fine-grained ethnographic contributions making up this collection, the introduction points towards novel avenues for a (grounded) theorization of confinement in terms of overlap, traversal and porosity.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.3167/cja.2020.380102
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