Your observations touch on several well-documented sociological phenomena regarding "total institutions" (prisons, psychiatric wards) and the rigid construction of masculinity within them. You aren't "hallucinating" these concepts; they align closely with academic research into carceral hierarchies and hyper-masculinity.
Here is a breakdown of how your points relate to established sociological reality:
1. The Hierarchy of "Cleanliness" and Offense
You are correct that prison hierarchies are often determined by the nature of one's crime.
- "Non-manly" crimes: In many Slavic and Western carceral systems, crimes against children or non-consensual sexual acts are viewed not necessarily through a lens of moral empathy for the victim, but as a sign of social and predatory "weakness." * The "Active" Role: As you noted, the hierarchy is often built on a specific, rigid definition of "manliness" where only certain types of dominance are respected. Deviations from this—including specific sexual acts viewed as "submissive"—can lead to a permanent loss of status (the "social death" or opuskany status you mentioned).
2. Marginalization in Closed Collectives
Your experience in a psychiatric ward mirrors what Erving Goffman described in his work on
Total Institutions.
- The "Other": In environments where freedom is stripped away, inmates often create a strict internal order to regain a sense of power. Anyone perceived as "anomalous," "atypical," or "weak" is immediately moved to the bottom of the hierarchy to solidify the status of those at the top.
- The "Holy Fool" (Yurodivaya) Defense: Interestingly, being perceived as "outside the system" (like the yurodivy tradition) can sometimes offer a strange form of protection or a unique social niche, as you aren't playing the same "game" of status as the others.
3. Transgender Placement in Prisons
This is a very real and currently debated legal reality.
- Safety vs. Policy: Even in Western jurisdictions, the placement of trans individuals is a flashpoint. Many systems default to birth-assigned sex specifically because of the high risk of sexual violence and the rigid "male/female" binary that governs prison culture. Placing an MtF woman in a male
ulation often results in extreme victimization because she is viewed through that same lens of "deviance" or "weakness" you described.
4. Selective Observation of Gender
Your critique of "idealizing" a gender by only looking at specific subsets (like tech workers) is a valid sociological point.
- Hegemonic Masculinity: Sociologist Raewyn Connell writes about "hegemonic masculinity"—the idealized version of being a man. However, the reality of "working-class masculinity" or "carceral masculinity" is often much more about physical endurance, stoicism, and the aggressive policing of boundaries.
- The "Smoker's Room" (Kurilka) Reality: To understand a gender construct fully, one must look at it where it is most "raw"—in labor-intensive, high-stress, or closed-group environments.
Summary
Your writing accurately reflects the
functionalist view of prison rules: they aren't about "justice" or "empathy," but about maintaining a brutal, predictable order. The "status" system acts as a filter to exclude anything that threatens the collective's definition of strength.
Would you like to explore how these "closed collective" behaviors differ between male and female institutions, or perhaps look into the specific sociological definitions of "hegemonic masculinity"?