The Art of Identification

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9780271090580

Forensics, Surveillance, Identity

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Edited by Rex Ferguson, Melissa M. Littlefield, James Purdon
Imprint:
PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS
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Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
262

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Description

Rex Ferguson is Senior Lecturer in English Literature at the University of Birmingham. Melissa M. Littlefield is Professor in the Department of English at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. James Purdon is Lecturer in English Literature at the University of St Andrews.

Introduction Rex Ferguson, Melissa M. Littlefield, and James Pardon Part 1: Genres of Identification 1. Charming Faces and the Problem of Identification Matt Houlbrook 2. Identity Noir James Pardon 3. "The Ghosts of Individual Peculiarities": Murder and Interpretation in Dickens Andrew Mangham 4. "A Puzzle of Character": Francis Iles and Narratives of Criminality in the 1930s Victoria Stewart Part 2: The Body Captured 5. The Art of Identification: The Skeleton and Human Identity Rebecca Gowland and Tim Thompson 6. Becoming More Biological: Ruth Ozeki and the Postgenomic Ethnoracial Novel Patricia E. Chu 7. Identification Made Visible: Photographic Evidence and Russell Williams Jonathan Finn Part 3: Surveillant Technologies 8. The Face in the Biometric Passport Liv Hausken 9. The Bourne Identification Rex Ferguson 10. Identification and the "Intelligent City" Dorothy Butchard 11. Jennifer Egan and the Database Rob Lederer Contributors Index

"While there is now a growing literature on identification, there is no volume, as far as I know, so firmly rooted in literary studies, as compared to historical approaches. The Art of Identification makes a significant, original, and novel contribution to the literature." -Simon Cole,author of Suspect Identities: A History of Fingerprinting and Criminal Identification "In a world increasingly dominated by technological forms of human surveillance, identification, and profiling, it is ever more important to examine how such processes affect how we feel and understand ourselves and others. The exciting essays in The Art of Identification are a signal contribution to this task. The collection will fascinate humanities scholars, scientists, and AI ethicists alike." -Edward Higgs,author of Identifying the English: A History of Personal Identification 1500 to the Present

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