Prison, Home, Garden Carceral Idylls and (Re)Thinking Detention in Robert Glas' Justice Beyond Revenge. Recalling Louk Hulsman (2024)

Authors
Publication date 2026
Host editors
  • Luisa T. Schneider
  • Robbert Dillema
  • Paola Rebughini
Book title Agency Beyond Confinement
Book subtitle Rethinking the Relationship Between Agency and Structure in the Contemporary World
ISBN
  • 9781041134275
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9781003669791
Series Routledge Advances in Sociology
Chapter 5
Pages (from-to) 94-112
Publisher London: Routledge
Organisations
  • Faculty of Humanities (FGw) - Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR) - Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis (ASCA)
Abstract
By romanticizing the prison, the aesthetic register of the carceral idyll insists that incarceration can be successful as long as it takes place under the right conditions, thus keeping the prison available for social acceptance over time. This chapter offers a close reading of Robert Glas’s art exhibition Justice Beyond Revenge. Recalling Louk Hulsman in which two structural metaphors generally associated with the prison play a central role, that of the home and the garden. These metaphors tend to obfuscate the violence of penal systems and should thus be identified and critiqued, even when used for positive goals in reformist and abolitionist discourses. At the same time, however, I argue how Glas’s exhibition – in presenting the carceral and the idyllic side by side – allows for a revaluation of metaphoric structures to outline trajectories of change.
Document type Chapter
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003669791-7
Downloads
Prison, home, garden_26_03_12 (Embargo up to 2026-09-13) (Final published version)
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