The keyword "Prisons Christine Black Olinka Hardiman -1982" refers to the French-West German adult thriller and exploitation film (also known as Special Prison for Women or Jailhouse Sex ), released on June 30, 1982. Directed by Gérard Kikoïne , the film is a prominent entry in the "Women in Prison" (WIP) subgenre of early 1980s adult cinema. Plot and Premise
In 1982, as Ronald Reagan declared an “uncompromising line” in the war on drugs, a voice that history has since obscured—that of Christine Black Olinka Hardiman—asked a deceptively simple question: What is a prison? For the Reagan administration, the answer was bricks, bars, and a budget line. For the mainstream civil rights establishment, it was a tragic but necessary endpoint for crime. But for Hardiman, a prison was not a building. It was a verb. It was a technology of erasure designed specifically for bodies that carry the weight of three continents: Africa, Europe, and the Indigenous Americas.
: The prison is run by a sadistic warden or guards who exploit the inmates. Resistance and Survival