Tentacular Faces: Race and the Return of the Phenotype in Forensic Identification
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| Publication date | 06-2020 |
| Journal | American Anthropologist |
| Volume | Issue number | 122 | 2 |
| Pages (from-to) | 369-380 |
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| Abstract |
The face, just like DNA, is taken to represent a unique individual. This article proposes to move beyond this representational model and to attend to the work that a face can do. I introduce the concept of tentacularity to capture the multiple works accomplished by the face. Drawing on the example of DNA phenotyping, which is used to produce a composite face of an unknown suspect, I first show that this novel technology does not so much produce the face of an individual suspect but that of a suspect population. Second, I demonstrate how the face draws the interest of diverse publics, who with their gaze flesh out its content and contours; the face engages and yields an affective response. I argue that the biologization of appearance by way of the face contributes to the racialization of populations.
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| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1111/aman.13385 |
| Downloads |
aman.13385
(Final published version)
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