No Use to the State: Phrasing Escape and a Black Radical Epistolary of Disability in Early Twentieth-Century Alabama Prisons

Micah Khater
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This article explores how Black women experienced and theorized disability from within Alabama’s prisons in the early twentieth century. Early-twentieth-century custodial prisons were a primary place in which disabled, southern Black women encountered the state. Some women entered prison disabled and many left with disabilities they had not had before. Indeed, disability was a condition of incarceration: a function of its punitive labor demands and the violence used to enforce disciplinary measures. Black women intimately understood and resisted this multifaceted violence and attempted to negotiate with the state for their release. Their handwritten letters, an archive that was unintentionally preserved by the state, demonstrate that incarcerated Black women’s articulation of uselessness was a profound critique of racial, carceral capitalism. Through close reading of recursive strategies, this article examines incarcerated Black women’s textual invocations of unproductivity as a disruption of the binary of metaphor and materiality in racial studies of disability.
对国家无用:二十世纪初阿拉巴马监狱中的措辞逃亡和黑人激进残疾人书信集
这篇文章探讨了20世纪初阿拉巴马州监狱中的黑人妇女是如何经历残疾并将其理论化的。20世纪早期的拘留所是残疾的南方黑人妇女接触该州的主要场所。有些妇女入狱时残疾,许多妇女离开时残疾,她们以前没有残疾。事实上,残疾是监禁的一个条件:它是惩罚性劳动要求和用于强制执行纪律措施的暴力的功能。黑人妇女深切理解并抵制这种多方面的暴力,并试图与州政府谈判以获得释放。她们的手写信件被国家无意中保存了下来,这些信件表明,被监禁的黑人女性对无用的表达是对种族主义和监禁资本主义的深刻批判。通过对递归策略的仔细阅读,本文考察了被监禁的黑人妇女在文本中对非生产性的呼唤,作为对隐喻和物质性二元对立在种族残疾研究中的破坏。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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