Gendered Representations of Apartheid: The Women’s Jail Museum at Constitution Hill

Authors

  • Stephanie Bonnes University of Colorado, Boulder
  • Janet Jacobs University of Colorado, Boulder

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v15i2.830

Abstract

This article examines the ways in which women are represented and remembered at The Women’s Jail at Constitution Hill museum, a former women’s jail that was used to incarcerate women during apartheid in Johannesburg, South Africa. Based on fieldwork at the museum, this study examines how the memory of the former prisoners and of the apartheid regime is shaped and narrated at this site. Situating our analysis within the context of the collective memory of apartheid, we examine how the museum uses artifacts and objects to depict both the specific forms of gendered dehumanization that women experienced at the jail, as well as their journeys to incarceration as a result of discriminatory apartheid laws. We also examine the absence of torture memory and references to hierarchical structures and interactions within the jail itself, noting that these were important dynamics of prison life that are not represented in the museum. This research presents a content and visual analysis of how the use of images and artifacts may illuminate and/or silence specific memories of degradation and humiliation in a museum space.

Key Words: Collective Memory, Museums, Representation, South Africa, Apartheid
Memorialization, Gender and Memorialization

Author Biographies

Stephanie Bonnes, University of Colorado, Boulder

Stephanie Bonnes is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Sociology at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Her research focuses on violence against women perpetrated at the interpersonal, organizational, and state level, gendered representations of violence, and identities. She has a master’s degree in International Studies from Rhodes University in South Africa.

Janet Jacobs, University of Colorado, Boulder

Janet Jacobs is Professor of Sociology and Women and Gender Studies at the University of Colorado. Her research focuses on ethnic and religious violence, gender, mass trauma, and collective memory. She is author of numerous books and journal articles, including Memorializing the Holocaust: Gender, Genocide and Collective Memory (2010) and The Holocaust Across Generations: Trauma and Its Inheritance Among Descendants of Survivors (forthcoming 2016). Her current work is on genocide and collective memory in Bosnia-Herzegovina.

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Published

07/12/2017

How to Cite

Bonnes, S., & Jacobs, J. (2017). Gendered Representations of Apartheid: The Women’s Jail Museum at Constitution Hill. Museum & Society, 15(2), 153–170. https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v15i2.830

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Articles