Summary of this article
- Jail is full of absurdity and strange routines, which Anand Teltumbde notices and often finds darkly funny.
- He writes his first lesson in a new epistemology was that facts are optional and seriousness is compulsory
- Teltumbde notes that he believed such a spectacle would provoke outrage, or at least curiosity. It did neither
The tragic dimension of jail has been exhaustively mined. What remains scandalously underexplored is its comic genius. Prison is a factory of absurdity, running at full capacity every day, and I made it a habit to collect its specimens—especially during the so-called free hours, when the cells were opened each morning. This ritual began with the ceremonial clanking of batons, as guards slid them menacingly across steel bars, producing a sound—less like an alarm than a declaration of sovereignty. |