What do we really know about relationships in prison?
What we’ve seen on Orange is the New Black? That Ruby Rose looks sexy with her shirt off? We’re familiar with drama between inmates, but then months later we see them on the red carpet and forget about the real women who aren’t movie stars who are spending their days and months and years behind bars, in a concrete cell, far from their family and friends.
When it comes to navigating relationships in prison, we really don’t know anything.
Now, Amanda Knox, one of history’s most notorious female prisoners, has shared her experiences of life behind bars. It’s a story of a straight woman in an all-female prison. More than this, it’s a story of a woman who is innocent in a place for the guilty.
“Prison is an isolating place,” Knox wrote in an essay for Broadly. “You’re forcibly removed from your homes and support network. You’re deprived freedom of movement, of social interaction, and of time. You’re forced to submit to total surveillance and control by strangers, alongside strangers. But relationships help keep us sane.”
“Most of my fellow inmates were bigger, tougher, meaner, more desperate, and had less to lose than me, so I never let my guard down. But I was stubborn, too. I was innocent, and for a long time, I refused to integrate into a world that didn’t belong to me. I earned my peace by helping inmates write their letters and translating for non-Italian speakers, but I was always quiet and withdrawn, my nose in a book or running laps of the yard.”
Knox travelled to Italy from Seattle in the US for a university exchange when she was 20. On September 20, 2007 Knox moved into a basement apartment at Via della Pergola with three other people. On November 2, one of the girls, Meredith Kercher, was murdered and it was Knox who found the body.