A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Unmaking and Remaking the World in Long-Term Solitary Confinement
In The Body in Pain, Elaine Scarry analyzes the structure of torture as an unmaking of the world in which the tools that ought to support a person’s embodied capacities are used as weapons to break them down. The Security Housing Unit (SHU) of California’s Pelican Bay State Prison functions as a weaponized architecture of torture in precisely this sense; but in recent years, prisoners in the Pelican Bay Short Corridor have re-purposed this weaponized architecture as a tool for remaking the world through collective resistance. This resistance took the form of a hunger strike in which prisoners exposed themselves to the possibility of biological death in order to contest the social and civil death of solitary confinement. By collectively refusing food, and by articulating the meaning and motivation of this refusal in articles, interviews, artwork, and legal documents, prisoners reclaimed and expanded their perceptual, cognitive, and expressive capacities for world-making, even in a space of systematic torture. Peer review process: Editorial review
Unmaking and Remaking the World in Long-Term Solitary Confinement
In The Body in Pain, Elaine Scarry analyzes the structure of torture as an unmaking of the world in which the tools that ought to support a person’s embodied capacities are used as weapons to break them down. The Security Housing Unit (SHU) of California’s Pelican Bay State Prison functions as a weaponized architecture of torture in precisely this sense; but in recent years, prisoners in the Pelican Bay Short Corridor have re-purposed this weaponized architecture as a tool for remaking the world through collective resistance. This resistance took the form of a hunger strike in which prisoners exposed themselves to the possibility of biological death in order to contest the social and civil death of solitary confinement. By collectively refusing food, and by articulating the meaning and motivation of this refusal in articles, interviews, artwork, and legal documents, prisoners reclaimed and expanded their perceptual, cognitive, and expressive capacities for world-making, even in a space of systematic torture. Peer review process: Editorial review
Unmaking and Remaking the World in Long-Term Solitary Confinement
Guenther, Lisa (author)
2022-01-24
Journal of Critical Phenomenology; Vol 1, No 1 (2018); 74-89 ; 2475-1308
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
DDC:
720
Le Corbusier in solitary confinement
British Library Online Contents | 2004
Sentenced: Architecture of Solitary Confinement
Taylor & Francis Verlag | 2014
|Encountering Development: The Making and Unmaking of the Third World
Online Contents | 1996
|REVIEW - Le Corbusier in solitary confinement
Online Contents | 2004