{"title":"识别","authors":"James A. Purdon","doi":"10.1093/acrefore/9780190201098.013.1125","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The term “identification” denotes both a social procedure (the act of recognition by which a person is acknowledged, formally or informally, to be a specific individual) and a genre of text (the marks, signs, or documents, such as signets, signatures, passports, ID cards, and birth certificates, which formally record and enable that procedure). Like many forms of literary narrative, the genres of identification are explicitly concerned with questions of the stability—or mutability—of the self. Who is this person? Do people change? If so, what, if anything, remains constant: how can we be confident that this is “the same” person? How much control do individuals have over the recording and representation of their personal characteristics? And how do those objective records relate, or fail to relate, to lived experiences of unique subjectivity? One distinction to be drawn between literary narrative and identification is the different value each has tended to give to temporality. Put simply, an identificatory technique is deemed to be the more effective the more capable it is of excluding from the process of identification those personal characteristics that might alter over time. Fingerprints and DNA, for instance, are among the most valuable identificatory tools because they remain constant from before birth until after death. Photographs, meanwhile, possess some identificatory value, but many factors can cause rapid and drastic changes in an individual’s physical appearance: this is one reason passports and similar documents include expiration dates and must be renewed. Narratives, on the other hand, are by definition temporal structures. They tell us that certain things happened or failed to happen. They frequently register and explore change and transition, and even narratives concerned with stasis and changelessness are obliged to acknowledge and account for the passage of time.\n In this sense, identification and narrative would seem to be at odds with one another. Identification exists to formalize the attribution of identity by rendering narrative irrelevant: the border guard who demands a valid passport will not accept an autobiography in its place. Yet several features of identification complicate this apparent antagonism. Firstly, identification documents function not only to record identities, but actively to constitute both individual identities and the broader concept of identity in a given society. They become not just records which diminish the significance of narrative, but constituent parts of the way individuals understand their place in society and by extension their own experience. Identification becomes part of the stories that individuals tell themselves, and tell about themselves. Secondly, because officially ratified forms of identification have a unique probative force, they themselves have become powerful tools in the production of stories and selves. The criminal who wishes to manufacture or steal a new identity must become adept in the deployment of official documents as a way of authenticating a fictitious claim to recognition. Finally—as countless scenes of identification trouble in fictional works suggest—the moment at which citizens are obliged to identify themselves by recourse to the data contained in identity documents frequently generates a reaction in the form of a heightened sense of individuality. The modern citizen is never more conscious of the complexity of their own story than at the moment when they hand over the misleading simplification, printed on passport or ID card, which constitutes their “identity.” Over the 20th century in particular, as modern systems of identity management became ever more technologically complex and bureaucratically stringent, literary works found new ways to describe and explain the effects of such systems on individuals and on the societies they inhabit.","PeriodicalId":207246,"journal":{"name":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Literature","volume":"250 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-08-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Identification\",\"authors\":\"James A. 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One distinction to be drawn between literary narrative and identification is the different value each has tended to give to temporality. Put simply, an identificatory technique is deemed to be the more effective the more capable it is of excluding from the process of identification those personal characteristics that might alter over time. Fingerprints and DNA, for instance, are among the most valuable identificatory tools because they remain constant from before birth until after death. Photographs, meanwhile, possess some identificatory value, but many factors can cause rapid and drastic changes in an individual’s physical appearance: this is one reason passports and similar documents include expiration dates and must be renewed. Narratives, on the other hand, are by definition temporal structures. They tell us that certain things happened or failed to happen. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

“身份”一词既指一种社会程序(正式或非正式地承认一个人是特定个体的识别行为),也指一种文本类型(正式记录和启用该程序的标记、符号或文件,如签名、护照、身份证和出生证明)。像许多形式的文学叙事一样,认同的类型明确地与自我的稳定性或可变性问题有关。这个人是谁?人会改变吗?如果是这样,那么什么(如果有的话)是不变的:我们怎么能确信这是“同一个人”?个人对其个人特征的记录和表现有多大的控制权?这些客观记录是如何与独特主体性的生活经验联系起来的,或者没有联系起来的?文学叙事和身份认同之间的一个区别是,它们对时间性的重视程度不同。简单地说,一种识别技术越有效,它就越能在识别过程中排除那些可能随着时间而改变的个人特征。例如,指纹和DNA是最有价值的识别工具,因为它们从出生到死亡都保持不变。与此同时,照片具有一定的识别价值,但许多因素会导致一个人的外表发生迅速而剧烈的变化:这就是护照和类似文件注明有效期并必须更新的原因之一。另一方面,从定义上讲,叙事是一种时间结构。它们告诉我们某些事情发生了或没有发生。他们经常记录和探索变化和过渡,甚至与停滞和不变有关的叙述也不得不承认和解释时间的流逝。从这个意义上说,身份和叙事似乎是相互矛盾的。身份证明的存在是为了通过使叙述变得无关紧要,从而使身份归属正式化:要求持有有效护照的边防警卫不会接受一本自传来代替。然而,识别的几个特征使这种明显的对抗复杂化。首先,身份证件的功能不仅是记录身份,而且积极地构成特定社会中的个人身份和更广泛的身份概念。它们不仅成为了降低叙事重要性的记录,而且成为了个人理解自己在社会中的地位以及自身经历的组成部分。身份认同成为了个人讲述自己的故事的一部分,也是讲述自己的故事的一部分。其次,由于官方认可的身份形式具有独特的证明力,它们本身已成为生产故事和自我的有力工具。想要伪造或窃取新身份的罪犯必须熟练运用官方文件,作为伪造身份要求的一种验证方式。最后——正如虚构作品中无数关于身份识别问题的场景所暗示的那样——当公民被迫依靠身份证件中的数据来识别自己的身份时,往往会产生一种强烈的个性意识。现代公民在交出印在护照或身份证上的、具有误导性的简化证件(即他们的“身份”)时,最能意识到自身故事的复杂性。特别是在20世纪,随着现代身份管理系统在技术上变得越来越复杂,在官僚上变得越来越严格,文学作品找到了新的方法来描述和解释这些系统对个人及其所居住的社会的影响。
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Identification
The term “identification” denotes both a social procedure (the act of recognition by which a person is acknowledged, formally or informally, to be a specific individual) and a genre of text (the marks, signs, or documents, such as signets, signatures, passports, ID cards, and birth certificates, which formally record and enable that procedure). Like many forms of literary narrative, the genres of identification are explicitly concerned with questions of the stability—or mutability—of the self. Who is this person? Do people change? If so, what, if anything, remains constant: how can we be confident that this is “the same” person? How much control do individuals have over the recording and representation of their personal characteristics? And how do those objective records relate, or fail to relate, to lived experiences of unique subjectivity? One distinction to be drawn between literary narrative and identification is the different value each has tended to give to temporality. Put simply, an identificatory technique is deemed to be the more effective the more capable it is of excluding from the process of identification those personal characteristics that might alter over time. Fingerprints and DNA, for instance, are among the most valuable identificatory tools because they remain constant from before birth until after death. Photographs, meanwhile, possess some identificatory value, but many factors can cause rapid and drastic changes in an individual’s physical appearance: this is one reason passports and similar documents include expiration dates and must be renewed. Narratives, on the other hand, are by definition temporal structures. They tell us that certain things happened or failed to happen. They frequently register and explore change and transition, and even narratives concerned with stasis and changelessness are obliged to acknowledge and account for the passage of time. In this sense, identification and narrative would seem to be at odds with one another. Identification exists to formalize the attribution of identity by rendering narrative irrelevant: the border guard who demands a valid passport will not accept an autobiography in its place. Yet several features of identification complicate this apparent antagonism. Firstly, identification documents function not only to record identities, but actively to constitute both individual identities and the broader concept of identity in a given society. They become not just records which diminish the significance of narrative, but constituent parts of the way individuals understand their place in society and by extension their own experience. Identification becomes part of the stories that individuals tell themselves, and tell about themselves. Secondly, because officially ratified forms of identification have a unique probative force, they themselves have become powerful tools in the production of stories and selves. The criminal who wishes to manufacture or steal a new identity must become adept in the deployment of official documents as a way of authenticating a fictitious claim to recognition. Finally—as countless scenes of identification trouble in fictional works suggest—the moment at which citizens are obliged to identify themselves by recourse to the data contained in identity documents frequently generates a reaction in the form of a heightened sense of individuality. The modern citizen is never more conscious of the complexity of their own story than at the moment when they hand over the misleading simplification, printed on passport or ID card, which constitutes their “identity.” Over the 20th century in particular, as modern systems of identity management became ever more technologically complex and bureaucratically stringent, literary works found new ways to describe and explain the effects of such systems on individuals and on the societies they inhabit.
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