Open Information Science (Aug 2020)

Disrupting Carceral Narratives: Race, Rape, and the Archives

  • Sutherland Tonia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1515/opis-2020-0012
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
pp. 156 – 168

Abstract

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Using critical archival studies as a methodological frame, this paper applies theories of the carceral archive to two historic legal cases: the Ala Moana Boys and the Central Park Five. Through these two cases I demonstrate that engaging the three primary underpinnings of the carceral archive—documentary records, narrative construction, and Foucauldian conceptions of “the carceral”—can critically expose, complicate, and unsettle carceral narratives, providing a new theoretical framework for troubling what Nigerian author Chimamanda Adichie calls “the danger of a single story” in the historical record. Finally, I argue that it is through disrupting carceral narratives and centering more liberatory counter-narratives that archives might envision and promote themselves as sites replete with emancipatory impulses and ripe with liberatory potential.

Keywords