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Narratives of Self and Identity in Women's Prisons: Stigma and the Struggle for Self-Definition in Penal Regimes

NCJ Number
238065
Journal
Punishment & Society Volume: 13 Issue: 5 Dated: December 2011 Pages: 571-591
Author(s)
Abigail Rowe
Date Published
December 2011
Length
21 pages
Annotation
This article explores representations of self and identity in the narratives of two English prisons.
Abstract
A concern with questions of selfhood and identity has been central to penal practices in women's prisons, and to the sociology of women's imprisonment. Studies of women's prisons have remained preoccupied with women prisoners' social identities, and their apparent tendency to adapt to imprisonment through relationships. This article explores the narratives of women in two English prisons to demonstrate the importance of the self as a site of meaning for prisoners and the central place of identity in micro-level power negotiations in prisons. (Published Abstract)