“They Threw Her in with the Prostitutes!”: Negotiating Respectability between the Space of Prison and the Place of Woman in Egypt (1943–1959)

The memoirs of political prisoners generally articulate the struggle of dissident individuals and political groups to attain a set of basic and often recurrent goals: freedom of expression and affiliation, social and economic security, humane treatment and the right to have a say in the management o...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hannah Elsisi
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Association Mnémosyne 2020-03-01
Series:Genre & Histoire
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/genrehistoire/5213
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1841551211009933312
author Hannah Elsisi
author_facet Hannah Elsisi
author_sort Hannah Elsisi
collection DOAJ
description The memoirs of political prisoners generally articulate the struggle of dissident individuals and political groups to attain a set of basic and often recurrent goals: freedom of expression and affiliation, social and economic security, humane treatment and the right to have a say in the management of state and society.1 This applies to both men's and women’s memoirs. Still, echoes of certain ‘special struggles’ permeate the narratives of woman political prisoners, henceforth mu‘taqalāt: how they sought to reconcile their experience of imprisonment with personal and public constructions of their selves as hardworking students, doting mothers, dutiful wives, obedient daughters and respectable middle-class women are all underlying themes running throughout their testimonies. The student demonstrations of 1945-46 presented the semi-colonial Egyptian state with a new and unique problem: up until that point women prisoners were thought of only as common criminals – drug-dealers, prostitutes (sic) and murderers. There was no cultural, or indeed logistical and infrastructural possibility for incarcerating a middle-class female revolutionary. Middle-class women, entering the space of the prison for the first time, risked their reputation and honour if they could not assert the decidedly different nature of their kind of imprisonment. It follows, then, that the struggle for respectability mounted by these pioneer mu‘taqalāt and the moral panics ensuant on their imprisonment would be foundational to the post-colonial landscape of national gender and citizenship regimes. This paper asks two interrelated questions: how was the prison implicated in the production of national gender regimes and how did mu‘taqalāt in turn challenge these national gender regimes in prison? I define mu‘taqalāt here as self-identifying women incarcerated for what they or the state branded as crimes of political identity and/or activity.
format Article
id doaj-art-2d206f4e322b44ec9079bd7725d05ee4
institution Kabale University
issn 2102-5886
language fra
publishDate 2020-03-01
publisher Association Mnémosyne
record_format Article
series Genre & Histoire
spelling doaj-art-2d206f4e322b44ec9079bd7725d05ee42025-01-09T16:23:03ZfraAssociation MnémosyneGenre & Histoire2102-58862020-03-012510.4000/genrehistoire.5213“They Threw Her in with the Prostitutes!”: Negotiating Respectability between the Space of Prison and the Place of Woman in Egypt (1943–1959)Hannah ElsisiThe memoirs of political prisoners generally articulate the struggle of dissident individuals and political groups to attain a set of basic and often recurrent goals: freedom of expression and affiliation, social and economic security, humane treatment and the right to have a say in the management of state and society.1 This applies to both men's and women’s memoirs. Still, echoes of certain ‘special struggles’ permeate the narratives of woman political prisoners, henceforth mu‘taqalāt: how they sought to reconcile their experience of imprisonment with personal and public constructions of their selves as hardworking students, doting mothers, dutiful wives, obedient daughters and respectable middle-class women are all underlying themes running throughout their testimonies. The student demonstrations of 1945-46 presented the semi-colonial Egyptian state with a new and unique problem: up until that point women prisoners were thought of only as common criminals – drug-dealers, prostitutes (sic) and murderers. There was no cultural, or indeed logistical and infrastructural possibility for incarcerating a middle-class female revolutionary. Middle-class women, entering the space of the prison for the first time, risked their reputation and honour if they could not assert the decidedly different nature of their kind of imprisonment. It follows, then, that the struggle for respectability mounted by these pioneer mu‘taqalāt and the moral panics ensuant on their imprisonment would be foundational to the post-colonial landscape of national gender and citizenship regimes. This paper asks two interrelated questions: how was the prison implicated in the production of national gender regimes and how did mu‘taqalāt in turn challenge these national gender regimes in prison? I define mu‘taqalāt here as self-identifying women incarcerated for what they or the state branded as crimes of political identity and/or activity.https://journals.openedition.org/genrehistoire/5213womenegyptprisonpolitical prisonersgender regime
spellingShingle Hannah Elsisi
“They Threw Her in with the Prostitutes!”: Negotiating Respectability between the Space of Prison and the Place of Woman in Egypt (1943–1959)
Genre & Histoire
women
egypt
prison
political prisoners
gender regime
title “They Threw Her in with the Prostitutes!”: Negotiating Respectability between the Space of Prison and the Place of Woman in Egypt (1943–1959)
title_full “They Threw Her in with the Prostitutes!”: Negotiating Respectability between the Space of Prison and the Place of Woman in Egypt (1943–1959)
title_fullStr “They Threw Her in with the Prostitutes!”: Negotiating Respectability between the Space of Prison and the Place of Woman in Egypt (1943–1959)
title_full_unstemmed “They Threw Her in with the Prostitutes!”: Negotiating Respectability between the Space of Prison and the Place of Woman in Egypt (1943–1959)
title_short “They Threw Her in with the Prostitutes!”: Negotiating Respectability between the Space of Prison and the Place of Woman in Egypt (1943–1959)
title_sort they threw her in with the prostitutes negotiating respectability between the space of prison and the place of woman in egypt 1943 1959
topic women
egypt
prison
political prisoners
gender regime
url https://journals.openedition.org/genrehistoire/5213
work_keys_str_mv AT hannahelsisi theythrewherinwiththeprostitutesnegotiatingrespectabilitybetweenthespaceofprisonandtheplaceofwomaninegypt19431959