''No two fingerprints are alike,'' or so it goes. For
nearly a hundred years fingerprints have represented
definitive proof of individual identity in our society.
We trust them to tell us who committed a crime, whether
a criminal record exists, and how to resolve questions
of disputed identity. But in this text, Simon Cole
reveals that the history of criminal identification is
far murkier than we have been led to believe. Cole
traces the modern system of fingerprint identification
to the 19th-century bureaucratic state, and its desire
to track and control increasingly mobile, diverse
populations whose race or ethnicity made them suspect in
the eyes of authorities. In an intriguing history that
traverses the globe, taking us to India, Argentina,
France, England, and the United States, Cole excavates
the forgotten history of criminal identification - from
photography to exotic anthropometric systems based on
measuring body parts, from finger-printing to DNA
typing. He reveals how fingerprinting ultimately won the
trust of the public and the law only after a long battle
against rival identification systems.As we rush headlong
into the era of genetic identification, and as
fingerprint errors are being exposed, this history
uncovers the fascinating interplay of our elusive
individuality, police and state power, and the quest for
scientific certainty. |
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