Full Description
Ebook available to libraries exclusively as part of the JSTOR Path to Open intiative.
How to creatively portray the nineteenth-century prison? Presenting original research findings and proposing novel connections between penal and visual history, this book investigates how artists and other inmates attempted to communicate their captivity by pictorial means. The prisons of Paris were characterized by distinctive scopic regimes from 1793 until 1894, especially the ascendant cellular jail, in which visibility was a central element of punitive practices. As authorities imposed increasing invisibility on detainees, artists such as Hubert Robert, Jacques-Louis David, Honoré Daumier, Gustave Courbet, Armand Désiré Gautier, Maximilien Luce, and Théophile Steinlen, among others, spent time behind bars grappling with representational strategies that almost always required conjoining words and images. The artists' prison was an ekphrastic site par excellence, a topography whose space could be depicted only when its words—graffiti, inscriptions, regulations—were bestowed legibility as signs. Penitentiary bureaucrats and criminologists analogously seized on the words and images through which inmates contested their invisibility to develop theories on recidivism, graffiti, and the "aesthetics of criminality," an ersatz study of inmate representations. The visual output scrutinized here is not mere illustration; these creations help fuse an integrated narrative showing how prison, art, and politics shaped each other.
Contents
List of Illustrations
Introduction: Creative Representation and Carceral Invisibility in French Prisons of the "Long" Nineteenth Century
Chapter 1. Outwitting Disappearance: Revolutionary Artists and The Pre-Modern Topographic Prison
Chapter 2. Interregnum: Honoré Daumier and Sainte-Pélagie
Chapter 3. 1848: Revolution of Carceral Invisibility?
Chapter 4. Visibility, Representation, and Other Aporias of the Cellular Regime
Chapter 5. Captivity after the Commune: Paris, New Caledonia, and Paradoxes of Visibility
Chapter 6. Anarchists in Prison: Rupture and Continuity of Representation
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Bibliography



