ID | 077546 |
Title Proper | Guilty bodies, productive bodies, destructive bodies |
Other Title Information | crossing the biometric borders |
Language | ENG |
Author | Epstein, Ccharlotte |
Publication | 2007. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article examines the forms of power brought into play by the deployment of biometrics under the lenses of Foucault's notions of discipline and biopower. These developments are then analyzed from the perspective of governmentality, highlighting how the broader spread of biometrics throughout the social fabric owes not merely to the convergence of public and private surveillance, but rather to a deeper logic of power under the governmental state, orchestrated by the security function, which ultimately strengthens the state. It is associated with the rise of a new governmentality discourse, which operates on a binary logic of productive/destructive, and where, in fact, the very distinctions between private and public, guilty, and innocent-classic categories of sovereignty-find decreasing currency. However, biometric borders reveal a complicated game of renegotiations between sovereignty and governmentality, whereby sovereignty is colonized by governmentality on the one hand, but still functions as a counterweight to it on the other. Furthermore, they bring out a particular function of the "destructive body" for the governmental state: it is both the key figure ruling the whole design of security management, and the blind spot, the inconceivable, for a form of power geared toward producing productive bodies. |
`In' analytical Note | International Political Sociology Vol. 1, No.2; Jun 2007: p149-164 |
Journal Source | International Political Sociology Vol. 1, No.2; Jun 2007: p149-164 |
Key Words | Biometric ; Biopower ; Human Security |