审美距离

Jeremy Isard
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在美国的刑事司法体系中,一场未被提及的审美即时性危机正在酝酿。被告被见得太快。或者更确切地说,它们被识别得太快了。他们在空间上得到认可,在辩护桌上,被律师和法警包围,在法庭表演中扮演主角。对大多数观察者来说,这种舞台表演和对它的熟悉带来了一系列不为人知的假设——这些假设,如果赤裸裸地看,就会削弱对无辜的假设。虽然隐性偏见和偏见同样使司法程序——程序和程序主义本身——短路,但却恶毒地允许隐性叙述超越证据。中断越界美学及其后果的工具将在没有实质性效率权衡的情况下服务于司法准确性。尽管美国法院对罪责和量刑的分歧令人称赞地将罪责调查与应受惩罚的问题分开,但前者,即不法行为的问题,永远无法真正脱离历史,无论是个人还是社会。也不应该是这样。英美人对社会非历史的刑事审判的坚持付出了高昂的代价:真实的、有质感的历史——对发生的事情的前景、前前前后和亲密的历史——被排除在之外,而那些支撑日常生活、叙事修辞和犯罪神话的更非个人化的历史却被允许发挥巨大的作用。正如它所代表的那样,真理的同时性或性格的多重性是不存在的。本文考虑的方法是使集体违法行为和真相的复杂性在法律上可被认知,并给予个人被告充分的主体地位,我认为这是第六修正案所要求的。它转向了一个以扰乱感知和研究感知如何以及为什么不稳定而闻名的来源:俄罗斯形式主义。
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Aesthetic Distance
There is an unnamed crisis of aesthetic immediacy afoot in the American criminal justice system. Defendants are seen too quickly. Or rather, they are recognized too quickly. They are recognized spatially, at the defense table, surrounded by lawyers and court marshals, playing the protagonists in the court performance. For most observers, this staging and its familiarity bring about a series of untold assumptions—assumptions that, when viewed nakedly, erode the presumption of innocence. While implicit biases and prejudices similarly short-circuit judicial proceedings—procedure and proceduralism itself—nefariously permit implicit narratives to outpace evidence. Tools to interrupt the aesthetics of transgression and its aftermath will serve judicial accuracy without substantial efficiency tradeoffs. While the bifurcation of the guilt and sentencing in American courts laudably partitions the culpability inquiry from the question of deserved punishment—the former, the question of wrongdoing, can never be truly divorced from history, neither personal nor social. Nor should it be. The Anglo-American insistence on a socially ahistorical criminal trial comes at a high cost: real and textured history—the foreground, leadup, and intimate histories of what occurred is kept out, while the more depersonalized histories that undergird daily life, narrative tropes, and mythologies of crime are permitted to play an outsized role. There is no place, as it stands, for simultaneity in truth or a multiplicity of character. This article thinks of ways to render collective transgression and the complexity of truth legally cognizable and to afford individual defendants full subject status as, I argue, the Sixth Amendment demands. It turns to a source famed for disrupting perception and the study of how and why perception is to be unsettled: Russian Formalism.
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