LABOUR HISTORY, sa.125, ss.161-185, 2023 (SSCI)
The ‘power
relations’ in the Ottoman Empire were gradually governmentalised and
centralised through modernist reforms in the long nineteenth century. As part
of this process, the practice of intramural and extramural carceral labour
became an important part of the Ottoman penal system in the late empire.
Although the state emphasised the rehabilitative effect of prison labour in
legal regulations, many specific cases and the extramural expansion of the
practice reveal that providing cheap labour was the main driving force in the
Ottoman case. However, the adverse reaction of prisoners to carceral labour was
just as important as the regulations, disciplinary practices, and the
administrative and financial limits of the state in determining the success of
the practice. By focusing on the resistance strategies of the prisoners, including
desertion, writing
petitions, collective walkouts, slowdowns, strikes, and pilferage, this paper
aims to amplify their voices. This prisoner-centred view enables us to take a
Foucauldian perspective in the context of power relations and resistance to such
practices and to illustrate how prisoners, as ‘indocile bodies’, weakened the
governmentality and domination of the state through many forms of ‘indocile
resistance’.