亚利桑那州的政治与监狱墨迹 后结构暴力世界中的导航地图

IF 0.1 4区 历史学 Q3 HISTORY
Enrique Alan Olivares-Pelayo
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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: 亚利桑那州的政治与监狱墨迹 后结构暴力世界中的导航地图 恩里克-艾伦-奥利瓦雷斯-佩拉约(Enrique Alan Olivares-Pelayo)(简历 美国西南部是一片充满神话、传说和民间英雄的土地,该地区的文化交汇和地理特质十分复杂。即使是 "西南 "的概念也是多变的、年轻的,它仍在通过政治和治安的进程,从移民改革到南部边境的日益军事化,不断自我完善。美国西南部在文化上与墨西哥西北部有着千丝万缕的联系,从街道名称、食物到现在声称拥有这片土地的英国人非法消费的毒品,无不如此。西南部是混血儿、盎格鲁人和原住民文化不稳定的混合体,仍在变化之中,仍在学习如何在不流血的情况下共存。它既是一个概念,也是一个地方,在矛盾、历史和自身的想象力中挣扎。亚利桑那州是最典型的 "西南部"。亚利桑那州的沙漠被荧光紫和橙色的落日所笼罩,是一个极度反差的地方。这里既有美国最大、发展最快的大都市之一--大凤凰城地区的城市扩张,也有数千平方英里无人居住的独特生态系统。在这片土地上,牛仔、义务警员和亡命之徒等受人喜爱的形象已经超越了地域的限制,在全球范围内广为流传,塞尔吉奥-莱昂内和克林特-伊斯特伍德通过好莱坞的方式,让人们一眼就能认出他们。毫无疑问,亚利桑那州也是一个充满暴力的地方,无论是在人们的想象中,还是在其血腥和饱受战争蹂躏的历史中。亚利桑那州的现代史--如果与革命战争或南北战争,甚至第一次世界大战相比,简直就是近代史--是在珍珠港事件之后才全面建立、规划和铺设起来的。[波士顿酒吧墙上的砖块比伟大的亚利桑那州还要早几百年,尽管西班牙人的行政存在以及他们的驻军和监狱可以追溯到 17 世纪晚期。监狱是亚利桑那州历史传统中不可磨灭的一部分。从 1876 年建造的臭名昭著的尤马领土监狱,到现代监狱的臃肿,亚利桑那州的监禁率在全国排名第五,亚利桑那州一直是一个相信苦日子的地方。如今,亚利桑那州每年花费 10 亿美元来维持其监狱系统1 。熟悉 SB 1070 等政策的人都不会对亚利桑那州被监禁人口的人口统计感到震惊:由于黑人和土著人在该州的人数较少,他们的比例过高,还有贫穷的白人和墨西哥人。很多很多墨西哥人。在许多墨西哥人身上,都能找到丰富的纹身图案,这些纹身讲述着一个关于文化遗产和民族自豪感的故事。在狱中,纹身是一种应对监禁的方式,它可以夺回亚利桑那州政府无法绝对控制的物质财富:囚犯的身体。在监禁期间,生活的方方面面都归结为一种暴力形式,无论是国家自上而下的权威管理,还是种族化监狱帮派自下而上的控制。2 纹身不仅仅是一个人是谁或自称是谁的表征;纹身还成为了监狱暴力(非)物质世界的导航地图。这种无形但无处不在的暴力的物质层面体现在纹身的应用上,纹身本身已成为一种图标语言,囚犯必须学会快速阅读,以免在不知情的情况下发现自己面临极大的危险。监狱中的纹身艺术家在很大程度上受到尊重,部分原因是他们的产品受到广泛追捧。纹身师主要为自己种族的成员纹身,但如果其他种族的成员不被狱方视为敌人,他们也可以自由地为其纹身。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Politics and Prison Ink in Arizona A Map for Navigation in a World of Post-structural Violence
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Politics and Prison Ink in Arizona A Map for Navigation in a World of Post-structural Violence
  • Enrique Alan Olivares-Pelayo (bio)

The American Southwest is a land of myths, legends, and folk heroes, complex in terms of the cultural confluence and geographic idiosyncrasies of the region. Even the notion of the "Southwest" is fluid, youthful, still working itself out through processes of politics and policing, from immigration reform to the increasing militarization of the southern border. The American Southwest is culturally indebted to the Mexican Northwest, for everything from the names of its streets and the food eaten to the illegal narcotics consumed by Anglos who now lay claim to the land. The Southwest is an unsteady amalgamation of Mestizo, Anglo, and Native cultures, still in flux, still learning how to coexist without bloodshed. It is a concept as well as a place, struggling with contradiction, with history, and with its own imagination. And no place is more quintessentially "southwestern" than Arizona.

Arizona, its desert drenched in startling fluorescent purple and orange sunsets, is a place of extreme contrasts. It is home to both one of the largest and fastest-developing metropolises in the United States, the urban sprawl of the greater Phoenix area, and thousands of square miles of unpopulated, unique ecosystems where the myth of a barren desert wasteland is laid to rest in blooms of vibrant, colorful flora. It is a land where the cherished figures of the cowboy, the vigilante, and the outlaw have transcended their geographical constraints to inhabit the global imagination, immediately recognizable thanks to Sergio Leone and Clint Eastwood by way of Hollywood. There can be no mistaking that it is also a place of violence, in the imagination and in its bloody and war-torn history. A modern history of Arizona—downright recent when compared to the likes of the Revolutionary War or Civil War, or even with World War I—was fully built upon, planned out, and paved only after Pearl Harbor. [End Page 302] There are bricks in the walls of bars in Boston hundreds of years older than the great state of Arizona, although the administrative presence of the Spanish, along with their garrisons and jails, dates to the late 17th century.

An indelible part of Arizona's historical tradition is the prison. From the notorious Yuma Territorial Prison, constructed in 1876, to the modern-day correctional bloat that boasts the fifth highest rate of incarceration in the country, Arizona has always been a place that believes in hard time. Today, Arizona spends one billion dollars per annum on maintaining its prison system.1 That is nearly 10 percent of the state's entire budget. The demographics of Arizona's incarcerated population will not shock anyone familiar with policies like SB 1070: a disproportionately high number of Black and Native people given their small numbers in the state, poor White people, and Mexicans. Lots and lots of Mexicans.

On many of these Mexicans will be found rich tapestries of tattoos that tell a tale of cultural heritage and ethnic pride. In prison, tattooing is a way of coping with incarceration by reclaiming the one material possession that the State of Arizona does not have absolute control over: the prisoner's very body. While in custody, every aspect of life boils down to a form of violence, whether it is administered from the top-down authority of the state or from the bottom-up control of racialized prison gangs.2 Tattoos become more than a mere representation of who a person is or claims to be; tats become a map to navigate the (im)material world of prison violence. The material aspect of this invisible but ever-present violence is manifested in the application of tattoos, which become an iconographic language unto themselves that prisoners must learn to read quickly, lest they unknowingly find themselves up against extreme danger.

Tattoo artists in prison command a large degree of respect, in part because the products of their trade are so widely sought. Artists primarily tattoo members of their own race, although they are free to tattoo members of other races if that race is not considered an enemy by an...

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