‘Happier in My Lonely Cell’: Convict Women’s Textiles

IF 0.1 N/A ART
H. Hughes
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Abstract

Abstract This article concerns the near total lack of artworks by Australia’s convict women that have come to light. First, I examine the reasons why convict women’s art was either not produced or not preserved, and then I offer a preliminary analysis of three textile artworks made by convict women in the mid-nineteenth century: the exceedingly well known Rajah Quilt (1841) and two less well known embroidery samplers from around the same time. In comparing these textiles, this article articulates the complex status of so much convict art regardless of its maker’s gender: its oscillation between a form of creative self-expression and an exercise in strict disciplinary reform and social conditioning from above. Yet, this article also shows how sexual difference inflected the life-worlds of female convicts and the textile art they produced, focusing on the gendered productive and reproductive forms of labour that were demanded of convict women in the penal colonies of Australia.
“在我孤独的牢房里更快乐”:罪犯的女性纺织品
这篇文章关注的是澳大利亚几乎完全缺乏被曝光的女囚犯的艺术品。首先,我研究了为什么囚犯女性的艺术作品没有被生产出来或没有被保存下来的原因,然后我对19世纪中期由囚犯女性制作的三件纺织品艺术品进行了初步分析:非常著名的拉贾被子(1841年)和大约同一时期的两件不太知名的刺绣样品。通过对这些纺织品的比较,本文阐明了如此之多的罪犯艺术的复杂地位,而不考虑其制造者的性别:它在一种创造性的自我表达形式和严格的纪律改革和自上而下的社会条件之间摇摆不定。然而,这篇文章也展示了性别差异是如何影响女囚犯的生活世界和她们制作的纺织艺术的,重点是澳大利亚流放地对女囚犯所要求的性别生产和生殖劳动形式。
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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CiteScore
0.20
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16
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