The Angola Prison Rodeo is a distinctive penal spectacle that challenges conventional understandings of incarceration, visibility, and institutional legitimacy. While modern punishment typically conceals violence, the rodeo publicly stages inmate bodily harm as entertainment. Drawing on ethnographic data from the 2023 and 2024 rodeos, this research explores how such visibility paradoxically reinforces carceral authority. Spectators interpret the event through familiar cultural narratives of traditional rodeo culture and dominant rehabilitation narratives, transforming penal violence into a palatable and even celebrated ritual. Inmates, meanwhile, navigate the rodeo as a space of constrained agency, motivated by financial incentives and opportunities for self-representation. Yet inmate participation is shaped by institutional approval and structural coercion. Crucially, the rodeo produces a synoptic surveillance dynamic—where the many watch the few—that complements the prison’s panoptic control, enlisting public spectatorship as both ideological legitimation and material support for the institution. By blending Gramscian cultural hegemony with Foucauldian disciplinary power, the Angola Rodeo emerges as a ritual that not only sustains but expands the cultural and economic reach of the carceral state.
Articles by Daniella Mascarenhas
Daniella Mascarenhas is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at Xavier University of Louisiana. Her research focuses on the intersection of political theory and carceral studies, specifically exploring theories of freedom, punishment, and penal institutions. Their scholarly work has appeared or is forthcoming in peer-reviewed journals such as Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society, The Political Science Reviewer, and The Journal of Political Science Education. Mascarenhas is currently under contract with Palgrave Macmillan for her forthcoming book manuscript, Disciplinary Theater: Punishment and Performance in the Louisiana Carceral State. She is also highly active in civic engagement research and has been awarded fellowships from organizations such as the Center for Artistic Activism and funding from the Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities.