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From face to facies: Recognition and machine vision in Beckett and Agamben

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posted on 2025-08-02, 13:00 authored by DH Jones
This article considers Beckett’s faces in the light of Giorgio Agamben’s account of the face as a disputed biopolitical marker. Agamben refers to the face both in terms of social and juridical identity in ancient Rome and as an icon of contemporary biopolitics, as social identity gives way to biometric recognition. Beckett’s own face figures prominently in the series of machine-generated Eigenface portraits created by artist Trevor Paglen in 2017, and whose use of the Eigenface method invokes modern facial recognition technologies. The Eigenface is examined here in relation to a gallery of ghostly progenitors: the faces of Beckett’s late plays.

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© David Houston Jones, 2024. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the cc by 4.0 license.

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This is the final version. Available on open access from Brill via the DOI in this record.

Journal

Samuel Beckett Today / Aujourd’hui

Pagination

233-244

Publisher

Brill Academic Publishers

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2024-11-13T11:33:05Z

FOA date

2024-11-13T11:35:53Z

Citation

Vol. 36, No. 2, pp. 233-244

Department

  • Languages, Cultures and Visual Studies

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