Waste Culture and Isolation: Prisons, Toilets, and Gender Segregation
Perry Zurn
Search for more papers by this authorPerry Zurn
Search for more papers by this authorAbstract
After reviewing the use of isolation in US prisons and public restrooms to confine transgender people in solitary cells and single-occupancy bathrooms, I propose an explanatory theory of eliminative space. I argue that prisons and toilets are eliminative spaces: that is, spaces of waste management that use layers of isolation to sanctify social or individual waste, at the outer and inner limits of society. As such, they function according to an eliminative logic. Eliminative logic, as I develop it, involves three distinct but interrelated mechanisms: 1) purification of the social center, through 2) iterative segregation, presuming and enforcing 3) the reduced relationality of marginal persons. By evaluating the historical development and contemporary function of prisons and restrooms, I demonstrate that both seek to protect the gender binary through waves of segregation by sex, race, disability, and gender identity. I further argue that both assume the thin relationality of, in this case, transgender people, who are conceived of as impervious to the effects of isolation and thus always already isolable. I conclude that, if we are to counter the violence of these isolation practices, we not only need to think holistically about eliminative spaces and logic, but also to richly reconceptualize relationality.
References
- Abbott, Jack Henry. 1981/1991. In the belly of the beast. New York: Vintage Books.
- Abel, Elizabeth. 1999. Bathroom doors and drinking fountains: Jim Crow's racial symbolic. Critical Inquiry 25 (3): 435–81.
- ACLU and Lambda Legal. 2016. Carcaño v. McCrory. No. 1:16-cv-236, March 28.
- Archibald, John. 2015. A drug dealer's wisdom: You can throw criminals away but you can't forget them. Al.com, April 10. http://www.al.com/opinion/index.ssf/2015/04/a_drug_dealers_wisdom_you_can.html.
- Attorney General. 2017. Revised treatment of transgender employment discrimination claims under Title VII of the Civil Rights Acts of 1964. October 4. https://www.justice.gov/ag/page/file/1006981/download.
- Baggs, Chris. 2005. “In the separate reading room for ladies are provided those publications specially interesting to them”: Ladies’ reading rooms and British public libraries 1850–1914. Victorian Periodicals Review 38 (3): 280–306.
10.1353/vpr.2005.0028 Google Scholar
- Bassichis, Daniel. 2007. It's war in here. New York: Sylvia Rivera Law Project.
- Bijersbergen, Karin A., Anja Kirkzwager, Peter van der Laan, and Paul Nieuwbeerta. 2014. A social building? Prison architecture and staff-prisoner relationships. Crime and Delinquency 67 (7): 1–32.
- Case, Mary Anne. 2010. Why not abolish laws of urinary segregation? In Toilet: Public restrooms and the politics of sharing, ed. Harvey Molotch and Laura Noren. New York: New York University Press.
- Cavanaugh, Sheila. 2010. Queering bathrooms: Gender, sexuality, and the hygienic imagination. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
- Champion, Steve. 2012. The sword into the pen. In Demands of the dead: Executions, storytelling, and activism in the United States, ed. Katy Ryan. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press.
10.2307/j.ctt20q2289.7 Google Scholar
- Cisneros, Natalie. 2016. Resisting “massive elimination”: Foucault, immigration, and the GIP. In Active intolerance: Michel Foucault, the Prisons Information Group, and the future of abolition, ed. Perry Zurn and Andrew Dilts. New York: Palgrave.
10.1057/9781137510679_17 Google Scholar
- Davis, Angela. 2003. Are prisons obsolete? New York: Seven Stories Press.
- Department of Defense (DOD). 2018. Report and recommendation on military service by transgender persons. February 22. https://media.defense.gov/2018/mar/23/2001894037/-1/-1/0/military-service-by-transgender-individuals.pdf.
- Department of Justice (DOJ). 2018. Transgender offender manual, change notice. May 11. #5200.04 CN-1. https://www.bop.gov/policy/progstat/5200-04-cn-1.pdf.
- Dillon, Stephen. 2015. The prisoner's dream: Queer visions from solitary. Qui Parle 23 (2): 161–84.
10.5250/quiparle.23.2.0161 Google Scholar
- Dodge, Mara. 1999. “One female prisoner is of more trouble than twenty males”: Women convicts in Illinois prisons, 1835–1896. Journal of Social History 32 (4): 907–30.
- Douglas, Mary. 1966/1984. Purity and danger: An analysis of concepts of pollution and taboo. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press.
10.4324/9780203361832 Google Scholar
- Emmer, Pascal, Adrian Lowe, and R. Barrett Marshall. 2011. This is a prison: Glitter is not allowed. Philadelphia: Hearts on a Wire Collective.
- Ferguson, Philip M. 2014. Creating the back ward: The triumph of custodialism and the uses of therapeutic failure in nineteenth-century idiot asylums. In Disability incarcerated: Imprisonment and disability in the United States and Canada, ed. Liat Ben-Moshe, Chris Chapman, and Allison C. Garey. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
10.1057/9781137388476_3 Google Scholar
- Filison, Rachel, and Desirée Ciambrone. 2015. The two faces of intergenerational relationships in prison. The Gerontologist 55 (supp. 2): 444.
- Fleming v. USA. 2017. https://assets.documentcloud.org/documents/3924241/Fleming-v-USA-Defendants-Opposition-to-PI.pdf.
- Foucault, Michel. 1972/2003. Le grand enfermement. In Dits et ecrits I. Paris: Gallimard.
- Freedman, Estelle B. 1981. Their sisters’ keepers: Women's prison reform in America, 1830–1930. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
10.3998/mpub.12633 Google Scholar
- Genet, Jean. 1943/1993. Our lady of the flowers. New York: Grove Press.
- Gershenson, Olga. 2010. The restroom revolution: Unisex toilets and campus politics. In Toilet: Public restrooms and the politics of sharing, ed. Harvey Molotch and Laura Noren. New York: New York University Press.
- G.G. v. Gloucester County School Board. 2016. No. 15-2056, United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit.
- Gossett, Reina, Eric Stanley, and Johanna Burton. 2018. Trap door: Trans cultural production and the politics of visibility. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.
- Guenther, Lisa. 2013. Solitary confinement: Social death and its afterlives. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
10.5749/minnesota/9780816679584.001.0001 Google Scholar
- Hanssens, Catherine, Aisha C. Moodie-Mills, Andrea J. Ritchie, Dean Spade, and Urvashi Vald. 2014. A roadmap for change: Federal policy recommendations for addressing the criminalization of LGBT people and people living with HIV. New York: Center for Gender & Sexuality Law at Columbia Law School.
- Gay Hawkins, and Stephen Muecke, eds. 2003. Down the drain: Shit and the politics of disturbance. In Culture and waste: The creation and destruction of value. Lanham, Md.: Rowman and Littlefield.
- Human Rights Watch. 2012. Old behind bars: The aging prison population in the United States. New York: Human Rights Watch.
- Kamash, Zena. 2010. Which way to look? Exploring latrine use in the Roman world. In Toilet: Public restrooms and the politics of sharing, ed. Harvey Molotch and Laura Noren. New York: New York University Press.
- Kogan, Terry. 2007. Sex separation in public restrooms: Law, architecture, and gender. Michigan Journal of Gender and Law 14 (1): 1–57.
- Kogan, Terry. 2010. Sex separation: The cure-all for Victorian social anxiety. In Toilet: Public restrooms and the politics of sharing, ed. Harvey Molotch and Laura Noren. New York: New York University Press.
- Kristeva, Julia. 1980/1982. Powers of horror: An essay on abjection. New York: Columbia University Press.
- Law, Victoria. 2009. Resistance behind bars: The struggle of incarcerated women. Oakland: PM Press.
- Lugones, María. 2003. Purity, impurity, and separation. In Pilgrimages/peregrinajes: Theorizing coalition against multiple oppressions. Lanham, Md.: Rowman and Littlefield.
- Jason Lydon, Kamaria Carrington, Hana Low, Reed Miller, and Mahsa Yazdy, eds. 2015. Coming out of concrete closets: A report on Black and Pink's national LGBTQ prisoner survey. Dorchester, Mass.: Black and Pink.
- Marvin, Amy. Forthcoming. Transsexuality, the curio, and the transgender tipping point. In Curiosity studies: A new ecology of knowledge, ed. Perry Zurn and Arjun Shankar. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
- Massachusetts Acts and Resolves. 1887. An act to secure proper sanitary provisions in factories and workshops. Act of March 24, 1887, ch. 103, § 2, 1887 Mass. Acts 668.
- McCrory, Governor Pat. 2016. Executive Order 93.
- The Minuteman. 2002. Ed “Transgender Defender” Kammerer. The Minuteman, November 26.
- Mogul, Joey, Kay Whitlock, and Andrea Ritchie. 2011. Queer (in)justice: The criminalization of LGBT people in the United States. Boston: Beacon Press.
- National Center for Transgender Equality. 2015. U.S. transgender survey. https://transequality.org/sites/default/files/docs/usts/USTS-Full-Report-Dec17.pdf
- nemec, blake. 2011. No one enters like them: Health, gender variance, and the PIC. In Captive genders: Trans embodiment and the prison industrial complex, ed. Eric Stanley and Nat Smith. Oakland: AK Press.
- North Carolina, General Assembly of. 2016. House Bill 2. Session Law 2016-3.
- Parrhesia. 2014. 51 Years: The new life without parole. Tennessee students and educators for social justice blog. July 8. http://tnsocialjustice.wordpress.com/2014/07/08/51-years-the-new-life-without-parole/.
- Penner, Barbara. 2013. Bathroom. London: Reaktion Books.
- Pitcher, Erich. 2018. Being and becoming professionally other: Identities, voices, and experiences of U.S. trans* academics. New York: Peter Lang.
10.3726/b12745 Google Scholar
- Plutarch. 2005. On the busybody. In Moralia VI. Trans. W. C. Helmbold. Cambridge, Mass.: Loeb Classical Library.
- Rafter, Nicole Hahn. 1983. Prisons for women, 1790–1980. Crime and Justice 5: 129–81.
10.1086/449095 Google Scholar
- Rafter, Nicole Hahn. 1990/1992. Partial justice: Women, prisons, and social control. New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publishers.
- Reiter, Karemet. 2016. 23/7: Pelican Bay prison and the rise of long-term solitary confinement. New Haven: Yale University Press.
- Richie, Beth E. 2012. Arrested justice: Black women, violence, and America's prison nation. New York: New York University Press.
- Scraton, Phil. 2009. Protests and “riots” in the violent institution. In The violence of incarceration, ed. Phil Scraton and Jude McCulloch. New York: Routledge.
- Shelley, Kristopher/”Krystal.” 2011. Krystal is Kristopher and vice versa. In Captive genders: Trans embodiment and the prison industrial complex, ed. Eric Stanley and Nat Smith. Oakland: AK Press.
- Stryker, Susan. 2018. Transgender history: The roots of today's revolution. New York: Seal Press.
- Taylor, Dianna. 2016. Between discipline and caregiving: Changing prison population demographics and possibilities for self-transformation. In Active intolerance: Michel Foucault, the Prisons Information Group, and the future of abolition, ed. Perry Zurn and Andrew Dilts. New York: Palgrave.
10.1057/9781137510679_8 Google Scholar
- Vitulli, Elias Walker. 2018. Dangerous embodiments: Segregating sexual perversion as contagion in US penal institutions. Feminist Formations 30 (1): 21–45.
10.1353/ff.2018.0002 Google Scholar
- Whittle, Stephen. 2002. Prison provision for trans people. In Respect and equality: Transsexual and transgender rights. Portland, Ore.: Cavendish Publishing.
- Wiegand, Shirley A., and Wayne A. Wiegand. 2018. The desegregation of public libraries in the Jim Crow south: Civil rights and local activism. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
- Zedner, Lucia. 1991. Women, crime, and custody in Victorian England. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
- Zurn, Perry. 2018. Puzzle pieces: Shapes of trans curiosity. APA Newsletter on LGBT issues in Philosophy 18 (1): 10–16.