Trans architecture and the prison as archive: “don’t be a queen and you won’t be arrested”

Author:

Sanders Tait1ORCID,Gildersleeve Jessica2,Halliwell Sherree2,du Plessis Carol1,Clark Kirsty A3ORCID,Hughto Jaclyn MW4,Mullens Amy B1,Phillips Tania M1,Daken Kirstie1,Brömdal Annette5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology and Wellbeing, Faculty of Health, Engineering and Sciences, Centre for Health Research, Institute for Resilient Regions, University of Southern Queensland, Australia

2. School of Humanities and Communication, Faculty of Business, Education, Law and Arts, Centre for Health Research, Institute for Resilient Regions, University of Southern Queensland, Australia

3. Department of Medicine, Health & Society, Vanderbilt University, Tennessee, USA

4. Departments of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Epidemiology, Brown School of Public Health, Centre for Health Equity Research, Brown University, Rhode Island, USA

5. School of Education, Faculty of Business, Education, Law and Arts, Centre for Health Research, Institute for Resilient Regions, University of Southern Queensland, Australia

Abstract

Most incarceration settings around the world are governed by strong cisnormative policies, architectures, and social expectations that segregate according to a person's legal gender (i.e. male or female). This paper draws on the lived experiences of 24 formerly incarcerated trans women in Australia and the U.S. to elucidate the way in which the prison functions according to Lucas Crawford's theory of trans architecture, alongside Jacques Derrida's notion of archive fever. The paper displays how the cisnormative archive of the justice system and its architectural constructs impact trans women in men's incarceration settings, including how trans women entering the incarceration setting are able to embody gender in a way that is not reified by the insistences of those normative structures. In light of this, this paper advances a theoretical understanding of the prison as an archive and as an architectural construct, providing a new means of understanding how incarcerated trans persons may use and perform gender to survive carceral violence.

Funder

HIV Foundation Queensland

Yale Fund for Gay and Lesbian Studies

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Law,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)

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