The criminal subject : Alphonse Bertillon and Francis Galton, their aesthetics and their legacies

This thesis applies aesthetic language to a variety of practices associated with the production and analysis of criminal identification portraits. Much of what might seem to be standardised in this model of portraiture was influenced by abstract visual techniques that were developed in the late nine...

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Main Author: Francis, Melanie Sarah Jane
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13349/
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author Francis, Melanie Sarah Jane
author_facet Francis, Melanie Sarah Jane
author_sort Francis, Melanie Sarah Jane
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis applies aesthetic language to a variety of practices associated with the production and analysis of criminal identification portraits. Much of what might seem to be standardised in this model of portraiture was influenced by abstract visual techniques that were developed in the late nineteenth century, specifically in the work of Alphonse Bertillon and Francis Galton, which frequently moves away from the judicial, into the experimental. Structured theoretically as opposed to chronologically, this thesis provides a thorough examination of the components - material, technological, temporal, and symbolic - that constitute the identification portrait. The theoretical resonance of Galton’s composite portrait photography and other abstract techniques is seen to inform twentieth century and recent debates on photographic portraiture, and the transformation of the portrait for which Bertillon was responsible, which placed great emphasis on the need to summarise, even memorise, a subject’s ‘data’ for police purposes, is found to have a legacy that extends far beyond the standardised ‘mug shot’ into much more imaginary territories. Jacques Derrida’s terminology for the supplement, Roland Barthes’ commentaries on the photographic portrait, Julia Kristeva’s model of colour perception, and Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari’s notion of the ‘body without organs’, are some of the many theoretical models with which this material is seen to resonate.
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spelling nottingham-133492025-02-28T11:24:37Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13349/ The criminal subject : Alphonse Bertillon and Francis Galton, their aesthetics and their legacies Francis, Melanie Sarah Jane This thesis applies aesthetic language to a variety of practices associated with the production and analysis of criminal identification portraits. Much of what might seem to be standardised in this model of portraiture was influenced by abstract visual techniques that were developed in the late nineteenth century, specifically in the work of Alphonse Bertillon and Francis Galton, which frequently moves away from the judicial, into the experimental. Structured theoretically as opposed to chronologically, this thesis provides a thorough examination of the components - material, technological, temporal, and symbolic - that constitute the identification portrait. The theoretical resonance of Galton’s composite portrait photography and other abstract techniques is seen to inform twentieth century and recent debates on photographic portraiture, and the transformation of the portrait for which Bertillon was responsible, which placed great emphasis on the need to summarise, even memorise, a subject’s ‘data’ for police purposes, is found to have a legacy that extends far beyond the standardised ‘mug shot’ into much more imaginary territories. Jacques Derrida’s terminology for the supplement, Roland Barthes’ commentaries on the photographic portrait, Julia Kristeva’s model of colour perception, and Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari’s notion of the ‘body without organs’, are some of the many theoretical models with which this material is seen to resonate. 2013-07-09 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13349/1/TCS_LR.pdf Francis, Melanie Sarah Jane (2013) The criminal subject : Alphonse Bertillon and Francis Galton, their aesthetics and their legacies. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. portrait portraiture photography police Galton Bertillon nineteenth-century contemporary art technology visual culture crime criminality subjectivity
spellingShingle portrait
portraiture
photography
police
Galton
Bertillon
nineteenth-century
contemporary art
technology
visual culture
crime
criminality
subjectivity
Francis, Melanie Sarah Jane
The criminal subject : Alphonse Bertillon and Francis Galton, their aesthetics and their legacies
title The criminal subject : Alphonse Bertillon and Francis Galton, their aesthetics and their legacies
title_full The criminal subject : Alphonse Bertillon and Francis Galton, their aesthetics and their legacies
title_fullStr The criminal subject : Alphonse Bertillon and Francis Galton, their aesthetics and their legacies
title_full_unstemmed The criminal subject : Alphonse Bertillon and Francis Galton, their aesthetics and their legacies
title_short The criminal subject : Alphonse Bertillon and Francis Galton, their aesthetics and their legacies
title_sort criminal subject : alphonse bertillon and francis galton, their aesthetics and their legacies
topic portrait
portraiture
photography
police
Galton
Bertillon
nineteenth-century
contemporary art
technology
visual culture
crime
criminality
subjectivity
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13349/