The Prison System and the Media: How “Orange Is The New Black” Engages with the Prison as a Normalizing Agent Thesis

(2015). The Prison System and the Media: How “Orange Is The New Black” Engages with the Prison as a Normalizing Agent . 10.25148/etd.FI15032114

thesis or dissertation chair

authors

  • Louis, Eunice

abstract

  • The purpose of this project is to ascertain the ways in which Orange is the New Black uses its platform to either complicate or reify narratives about the prison system, prisoners and their relationship to the state. This research uses the works of Giorgio Agamben, Colin Dayan, Michelle Alexander and Lisa Guenther to situate the ways the state uses the prison and social narratives about the prison to extend its control on certain populations beyond prison walls through police presence, parole, the war on drugs and prison fees.

    From that basis, this work argues that while Orange does challenge some narratives about race and sexuality, because of its reliance on “bad choices” as a humanizing trope and its reliance on certain racialized stereotypes for entertainment, the show ultimately does more to reify existing narratives that support state interests.

publication date

  • March 20, 2015

keywords

  • Carceral
  • Media
  • New Jim Crow
  • Orange is the New Black
  • Prison reform
  • Solitary Confinement
  • TV
  • biopolitics
  • norms
  • prison

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)