{"title":"肖像与照片:摄影类型的转喻基础","authors":"Michaela Fišerová","doi":"10.1080/1535685x.2023.2213578","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"AbstractThis article focuses on the genre distinction between artistic and legal photographs of faces: while the artistic portrait tends to express the singular soul of the person pictured, the biometric mugshot aims to scan singular physical traits without any psychological expression. How do these photographic genres allow us to identify the represented person? What do each of them seek to recognize? To grasp our metaphysical expectations of photographic technology, and thus to bridge the gap between discursive styles of these two photographic genres, I revise Derrida’s deconstruction of the law of genre. Further, I argue that Derrida’s and Nancy’s subversive readings of Kant’s concepts of parergon and schema help us to understand the rhetorical setting of the human mind, which organizes the photographic work of framing fragments. Finally, I explain the metaphysical conditions of possibility for both photographic genres by situating their opposite goals in the interval of personal recognition constructed by metonymical schematism.Keywords: photographygenreexpressionmetonymyrecognitionImmanuel KantJacques DerridaJean-Luc Nancy Notes1 This paper is the result of Metropolitan University Prague research project no. 93–01 “Political Science, Media and Anglophone Studies” (2022) based on a grant from the Institutional Fund for the Long-term Strategic Development of Research Organizations.2 See Kendall L. Walton, “Transparent Pictures: On the Nature of Photographic Realism,” Critical Inquiry 11, no. 2 (1984), pp. 246–277 and Catharine Abell, “The Epistemic Value of Photographs,” in Philosophical Perspecives on Depiction, eds. Catharina Abell and Katerina Bantinaki (Oxford: Oxford University Press 2010), pp. 81–103.3 The topic of photographic realism has been discussed many times in philosophy, aesthetics, and theory of art. Roland Barthes, among others, contributed to this discussion in his Camera Lucida, where he mentions the photographic imprint of light is capable of keeping us un touch with the past pictured. Not only it let us believe that “this-has-been,” it even produces illusion of emanation of the pictured events. See Roland Barthes, Camera Lucida. Note on Photography (New York: Hill and Wang 1981), pp. 80–81. Derrida himself admits that “It is in this way that I would be tempted to understand what Barthes called ‘emanation’. This flow of light which captures or possesses me, invests me, invades me, or envelops me is not a ray of light, but the source of possible view: from the point of view of the other.” Jacques Derrida, Bernard Stiegler, Echographies of Television (New York: Polity Press 2002), pp. 122–123. In this respect, Derrida shares with the late Barthes his suggestion of a double reception of photographic pictures, but instead of keeping Barthes‘conceptual polarity of studium and punctum as an unbridgeable binary opposition between the conventional and the dreamy mode of reception, he suggests understanding it as two poles delimiting the interval of gaze, where an encounter with imaginary “spectres” occurs.4 Jacques Derrida, “The Law of Genre,” Critical Inquiry 7, no. 1 (1980): p. 56.5 Jacques Derrida, “The Law of Genre,” p. 56.6 Jacques Derrida, “The Law of Genre,” p. 57.7 Jacques Derrida, “Force of Law,” in Deconstruction and the Possibility of Justice, eds. Drucilla Cornell, Michel Rosenfeld and David Gray Carlson (New York: Routledge 1992), p. 16.8 Jacques Derrida, “Force of Law,” p. 25.9 Petra Gehring, “Force and ‘Mystical Foundation’ of Law: How Jacques Derrida Addresses Legal Discourse,” German Law Journal 6, no. 1 (2005): p. 163.10 This topic is elaborated in Fišerová’s paper “On Deferral,” where she explains Derrida’s interest in Kafka’s literary work, in his subversive understanding of parasitical legal representation. See Michaela Fišerová, “On Deferral. Kafka and Derrida before the Law,” in Lessons from Kafka, eds. Tomáš Koblížek, Petr Koťátko (Praha: Filosofia 2021), p. 183–205.11 As Max M. Houck explains, alongside the standardized double—front view and profile—photographic image of the criminal’s face, Bertillon entered his measurements on a data card, with additional information such as hair, beard, and eye color. These photographs were the precursors to today’s “mugshots.” Bertillon called his cards a portrait parlé, a spoken portrait, that described the criminal both through measurements and words. Later on, Bertillon developed this evidence picture into a “metric” photography based on the rule of absence of facial expression that he expected to help him “precisely reconstruct the dimension of a particular space and the placement of objects in it, or to measure the object represented.” Max M. Houck, Forensic Science: Modern Methods of Solving Crime. (London: Praeger, 2007), p. 26.12 As Kelly Gates puts it, the authority of biometric identification relies on a direct link to bodies: “biometric technologies promise to stabilize the messy ambiguity of identity, to automatically read a stable, individual identity directly off the body. To be effective, the connection that biometric technologies establish between identity and the body must appear natural and self-evident.” Kelly A. Gates, Our Biometric Future. Facial Recognition Technology and the Culture of Surveillance. (New York: New York University, 2011), p. 14.13 According to Gates, “the assumption that biometrics are derived from and link directly to physical bodies conceals a complex technological process of mediation, as well as a whole set of historical relationships that create the very conditions of possibility for biometric identification.” Kelly A. Gates, Our Biometric Future. Facial Recognition Technology and the Culture of Surveillance, p. 15.14 Kelly A. Gates, Our Biometric Future, p. 23.15 Gates observes that “we are perfectly comfortable cutting them off from our bodies by photographing them and treating those images as objects-in-themselves. Our photographed faces do not diminish our subjectivities, our identities, or our relations with others. Rather, photography is now used as a means of constructing, facilitating, and enhancing these dimensions of what it means to human. Of course it is also used to classify and individuate us in ways over which we have no control.” Kelly A. Gates, Our Biometric Future, p. 23.16 https://ultimateclassicrock.com/rolling-stones-arrest-history/17 http://www.feelnumb.com/2015/08/26/prince-mugshot-jackson-mississippi-arrest-1980/18 https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/news/hugh-grant-arrest-mugshot-divine-brown-sex-worker-twitter-a9233586.html19 As Jacobs puts it, “During a session, your subject moves almost continually between shots, and successful portraits depend on friendly rapport to signal ‘stop there’.” Lou Jacobs, The Art of Posing (Buffalo: Amherst Media, 2010), p. 7.20 Natalie Dybisz, Creative Portrait Photography. Innovative Digital Portraiture to Reveal the Inner Subject (East Sussex: The Ilex Press, 2012), p. 8.21 Natalie Dybisz, Creative Portrait Photography, p. 6.22 Photographic portrait produces the same “effects of representation” as painted portrait in Louis Marin, Portrait of the King (Macmillan, 1988), pp. 23–33. Both generate signifying and powerful representation of a pictured person. However, unlike Marin’s work, my distinction of two specific genres helps to understand two divergent discursive ways of representation of the same person in photography.23 https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw09606/Mick-Jagger24 https://cz.pinterest.com/pin/92746073556000867/25 https://www.pinterest.fr/pin/860469072528798660/26 Jacques Derrida, Trace et archive, image et art (Paris: Ina Éditions 2014), p. 39.27 Jean-Luc Nancy, A plus d'un titre. Jacques Derrida (Paris: Galilée, 2007), pp. 11–12.28 Jean-Luc Nancy, “Elliptical Sense,” in Derrida: a Critical Reader, ed. David Wood (Oxford: Blackwell, 1992), p. 39.29 Jacques Derrida, Trace et archive, image et art (Paris: Ina Éditions 2014), p. 37.30 Jacques Derrida, Trace et archive, image et art, p. 38.31 See Jakub Mácha’s account of the deconstructable paralogic of exemplarity in Jakub Mácha, “The Logic of Exemplarity,” Law and Literature 34. no. 1 (2020): 67–81.32 Jacques Derrida, On Touching (Stanford: Stanford University Press 2005), p. 17.33 Jacques Derrida, The Work of Mourning (Chicago: The University of Chicago, 2001), p. 61.34 In Feu la cendre Derrida deals with the metonymy of cinders. As any remain, cinders haunts by its incomplete presence, its partial character that forces to recall the past event, of which it is a remain. In this sense, photography and cinders provoke the same metonymical expectation of returning the past: if I touch cinders, I do not touch fire; if I see a photograph, I do not see the past event. See Jacques Derrida, Feu la cendre (Paris: Des femmes 1987), p. 19.35 Jean-Claude Lebensztejn, “Starting out from the Frame (Vignettes),” in Deconstruction and the Visual Arts. Art, Media, Architecture, eds. Peter Brunette and David Wills (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994), p. 118.36 Immanuel Kant, Critique of Pure Reason (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), p. 273.37 Nancy emphasizes that the Kantian subject produces unity of images as successive. “That is its primary schematism, or its pure imagination, the condition of possibility of any image, of any (re)presentation: the condition for their being an image, and not a chaotic flux (without this singular image being simply one and unified: what it does, simply, is present itself).” Jean-Luc Nancy, The Ground of the Image (New York : Fordham University Press, 2005), pp. 81–82.38 Jean-Luc Nancy, The Ground of the Image, p. 82.39 Immanuel Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, p. 272.40 Immanuel Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, p. 273.41 In Derrida, photographs are understood as metonymical remains: in the fragmentary paralogic of photographic visuality, what is accidental is also essential and inevitable. Contrary to the metaphorical disposition of painting, photographic picture is technological remains, a ruin of the past percpetion, which depends of the rhetoric of metonymy. “It thus seems impossible, and that's the whole paradox, to stop this metonymic substitution. There is nothing but proper names, and yet everything remains metonymic.” Jacques Derrida, Athens, Still Remains. The Photographs of Jean-Francois Bonhomme (New York: Fordham University Press 2010), p. 3.42 Martin Crowley, “Cutting and Letting-Be”, in Nancy and Visual Culture, eds. Carrie Giunta and Adrienne Janus (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2016), p. 23.43 Martin Crowley, “Cutting and Letting-Be”, p. 23.44 The very condition of Nancy's \"touching by seeing\" is a functional technology of its metonymical stopping. Photography does the same thing—it suspends what would otherwise escape, holds it back before our gaze. Nancy explains this synesthetic expectation of touching by seeing as a technological ex-scription, ex-pression from one body into another. Such a touch is inseparable from cultural technical supplementarity, from “syncope inserted between contact surfaces and interrupting direct contact: Without this différance, there would be no contact as such; contact would not appear; but with this différance, contact never appears in its full purity, never in any immediate plenitude, either. In both cases, the phenomenality, or the phenomenology, of contact is interrupted or diverted; it is suspended in view of contact.” Jacques Derrida, On Touching, p. 229.45 Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987), p. 64.46 Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting, p. 63.47 According to Derrida, “when Kant replies to our question ‘What is a frame?’ by saying: it’s a parergon, a hybrid of outside and inside, but a hybrid which is not a mixture or a half-measure, an outside which is called to the inside of the inside in order to constitute it as an inside; and when he gives as examples of the parergon, alongside the frame, clothing and column, we ask to see, we say to ourselves that there are ‘great difficulties’ here, and that the choice of examples, and their association, is not self-evident.” Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting, p. 63–64.48 Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting, p. 63.49 Derrida claims that Kant finds parergon dangerous by its excess: “Because reason is ‘conscious of its impotence to satisfy its moral need,’ it has recourse to the par ergon, to grace, to mystery, to miracles. It needs the supplementary work. This additive, to be sure, is threatening.” Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting, 56. In Derrida, on the contrary, parergon comes in addition to the work, and is welcomed as its inevitable accessory, by remaining neither simply outside nor simply inside.50 Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting, p. 73.51 Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting, p. 54.52 Nancy observes that the genre of portrait is based on supposition of self-expression, ex-pression of the soul by corporeal techné, by technology of muscles and nerves of the body. If one can be recognized after her portrait, it is not because portrait represents or reproduces the pictured person: “the portrait does not constitute simply a revelation of an identity”; its aim “is no longer to reproduce, therefore, not even to reveal, but to produce the exposition of the subject. To pro-duce it: to bring it forth, to draw it out.” Jean-Luc Nancy, Portrait (New York: Fordham University Press 2018), p. 14.53 Jacques Derrida, “Une certaine possibilité impossible de dire l'événement,” in Dire l'événement, est-ce possible?, eds. Jacques Derrida, Soussana Gad and Alexis Nouss (Paris: L'Harmattan, 2001), p. 89.54 Jacques Derrida, op. cit., p. 89.Additional informationNotes on contributorsMichaela FišerováMichaela Fišerová is Associate Professor at Metropolitan University Prague (Czech Republic). She specializes in political philosophy, aesthetics, and media studies. She is the author of the monographs Sharing the Visible: Rethinking Foucault (Paris, 2013), Image and Power: Interviews with French Thinkers (Prague, 2015), Deconstruction of Signature (Prague, 2016), and Fragmentary Vision: Rancière, Derrida, Nancy (Prague, 2019). Her new monograph Event of Signature. Jacques Derrida and Repeating the Unrepeatable is to be published with SUNY Press (New York, 2022).","PeriodicalId":360932,"journal":{"name":"Law and Literature","volume":"70 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-05-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Portrait and Mugshot: Metonymical Foundation of Photographic Genres\",\"authors\":\"Michaela Fišerová\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/1535685x.2023.2213578\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"AbstractThis article focuses on the genre distinction between artistic and legal photographs of faces: while the artistic portrait tends to express the singular soul of the person pictured, the biometric mugshot aims to scan singular physical traits without any psychological expression. How do these photographic genres allow us to identify the represented person? What do each of them seek to recognize? To grasp our metaphysical expectations of photographic technology, and thus to bridge the gap between discursive styles of these two photographic genres, I revise Derrida’s deconstruction of the law of genre. Further, I argue that Derrida’s and Nancy’s subversive readings of Kant’s concepts of parergon and schema help us to understand the rhetorical setting of the human mind, which organizes the photographic work of framing fragments. Finally, I explain the metaphysical conditions of possibility for both photographic genres by situating their opposite goals in the interval of personal recognition constructed by metonymical schematism.Keywords: photographygenreexpressionmetonymyrecognitionImmanuel KantJacques DerridaJean-Luc Nancy Notes1 This paper is the result of Metropolitan University Prague research project no. 93–01 “Political Science, Media and Anglophone Studies” (2022) based on a grant from the Institutional Fund for the Long-term Strategic Development of Research Organizations.2 See Kendall L. Walton, “Transparent Pictures: On the Nature of Photographic Realism,” Critical Inquiry 11, no. 2 (1984), pp. 246–277 and Catharine Abell, “The Epistemic Value of Photographs,” in Philosophical Perspecives on Depiction, eds. Catharina Abell and Katerina Bantinaki (Oxford: Oxford University Press 2010), pp. 81–103.3 The topic of photographic realism has been discussed many times in philosophy, aesthetics, and theory of art. Roland Barthes, among others, contributed to this discussion in his Camera Lucida, where he mentions the photographic imprint of light is capable of keeping us un touch with the past pictured. Not only it let us believe that “this-has-been,” it even produces illusion of emanation of the pictured events. See Roland Barthes, Camera Lucida. Note on Photography (New York: Hill and Wang 1981), pp. 80–81. Derrida himself admits that “It is in this way that I would be tempted to understand what Barthes called ‘emanation’. This flow of light which captures or possesses me, invests me, invades me, or envelops me is not a ray of light, but the source of possible view: from the point of view of the other.” Jacques Derrida, Bernard Stiegler, Echographies of Television (New York: Polity Press 2002), pp. 122–123. In this respect, Derrida shares with the late Barthes his suggestion of a double reception of photographic pictures, but instead of keeping Barthes‘conceptual polarity of studium and punctum as an unbridgeable binary opposition between the conventional and the dreamy mode of reception, he suggests understanding it as two poles delimiting the interval of gaze, where an encounter with imaginary “spectres” occurs.4 Jacques Derrida, “The Law of Genre,” Critical Inquiry 7, no. 1 (1980): p. 56.5 Jacques Derrida, “The Law of Genre,” p. 56.6 Jacques Derrida, “The Law of Genre,” p. 57.7 Jacques Derrida, “Force of Law,” in Deconstruction and the Possibility of Justice, eds. Drucilla Cornell, Michel Rosenfeld and David Gray Carlson (New York: Routledge 1992), p. 16.8 Jacques Derrida, “Force of Law,” p. 25.9 Petra Gehring, “Force and ‘Mystical Foundation’ of Law: How Jacques Derrida Addresses Legal Discourse,” German Law Journal 6, no. 1 (2005): p. 163.10 This topic is elaborated in Fišerová’s paper “On Deferral,” where she explains Derrida’s interest in Kafka’s literary work, in his subversive understanding of parasitical legal representation. See Michaela Fišerová, “On Deferral. Kafka and Derrida before the Law,” in Lessons from Kafka, eds. Tomáš Koblížek, Petr Koťátko (Praha: Filosofia 2021), p. 183–205.11 As Max M. Houck explains, alongside the standardized double—front view and profile—photographic image of the criminal’s face, Bertillon entered his measurements on a data card, with additional information such as hair, beard, and eye color. These photographs were the precursors to today’s “mugshots.” Bertillon called his cards a portrait parlé, a spoken portrait, that described the criminal both through measurements and words. Later on, Bertillon developed this evidence picture into a “metric” photography based on the rule of absence of facial expression that he expected to help him “precisely reconstruct the dimension of a particular space and the placement of objects in it, or to measure the object represented.” Max M. Houck, Forensic Science: Modern Methods of Solving Crime. (London: Praeger, 2007), p. 26.12 As Kelly Gates puts it, the authority of biometric identification relies on a direct link to bodies: “biometric technologies promise to stabilize the messy ambiguity of identity, to automatically read a stable, individual identity directly off the body. To be effective, the connection that biometric technologies establish between identity and the body must appear natural and self-evident.” Kelly A. Gates, Our Biometric Future. Facial Recognition Technology and the Culture of Surveillance. (New York: New York University, 2011), p. 14.13 According to Gates, “the assumption that biometrics are derived from and link directly to physical bodies conceals a complex technological process of mediation, as well as a whole set of historical relationships that create the very conditions of possibility for biometric identification.” Kelly A. Gates, Our Biometric Future. Facial Recognition Technology and the Culture of Surveillance, p. 15.14 Kelly A. Gates, Our Biometric Future, p. 23.15 Gates observes that “we are perfectly comfortable cutting them off from our bodies by photographing them and treating those images as objects-in-themselves. Our photographed faces do not diminish our subjectivities, our identities, or our relations with others. Rather, photography is now used as a means of constructing, facilitating, and enhancing these dimensions of what it means to human. Of course it is also used to classify and individuate us in ways over which we have no control.” Kelly A. Gates, Our Biometric Future, p. 23.16 https://ultimateclassicrock.com/rolling-stones-arrest-history/17 http://www.feelnumb.com/2015/08/26/prince-mugshot-jackson-mississippi-arrest-1980/18 https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/news/hugh-grant-arrest-mugshot-divine-brown-sex-worker-twitter-a9233586.html19 As Jacobs puts it, “During a session, your subject moves almost continually between shots, and successful portraits depend on friendly rapport to signal ‘stop there’.” Lou Jacobs, The Art of Posing (Buffalo: Amherst Media, 2010), p. 7.20 Natalie Dybisz, Creative Portrait Photography. Innovative Digital Portraiture to Reveal the Inner Subject (East Sussex: The Ilex Press, 2012), p. 8.21 Natalie Dybisz, Creative Portrait Photography, p. 6.22 Photographic portrait produces the same “effects of representation” as painted portrait in Louis Marin, Portrait of the King (Macmillan, 1988), pp. 23–33. Both generate signifying and powerful representation of a pictured person. However, unlike Marin’s work, my distinction of two specific genres helps to understand two divergent discursive ways of representation of the same person in photography.23 https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw09606/Mick-Jagger24 https://cz.pinterest.com/pin/92746073556000867/25 https://www.pinterest.fr/pin/860469072528798660/26 Jacques Derrida, Trace et archive, image et art (Paris: Ina Éditions 2014), p. 39.27 Jean-Luc Nancy, A plus d'un titre. Jacques Derrida (Paris: Galilée, 2007), pp. 11–12.28 Jean-Luc Nancy, “Elliptical Sense,” in Derrida: a Critical Reader, ed. David Wood (Oxford: Blackwell, 1992), p. 39.29 Jacques Derrida, Trace et archive, image et art (Paris: Ina Éditions 2014), p. 37.30 Jacques Derrida, Trace et archive, image et art, p. 38.31 See Jakub Mácha’s account of the deconstructable paralogic of exemplarity in Jakub Mácha, “The Logic of Exemplarity,” Law and Literature 34. no. 1 (2020): 67–81.32 Jacques Derrida, On Touching (Stanford: Stanford University Press 2005), p. 17.33 Jacques Derrida, The Work of Mourning (Chicago: The University of Chicago, 2001), p. 61.34 In Feu la cendre Derrida deals with the metonymy of cinders. As any remain, cinders haunts by its incomplete presence, its partial character that forces to recall the past event, of which it is a remain. In this sense, photography and cinders provoke the same metonymical expectation of returning the past: if I touch cinders, I do not touch fire; if I see a photograph, I do not see the past event. See Jacques Derrida, Feu la cendre (Paris: Des femmes 1987), p. 19.35 Jean-Claude Lebensztejn, “Starting out from the Frame (Vignettes),” in Deconstruction and the Visual Arts. Art, Media, Architecture, eds. Peter Brunette and David Wills (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994), p. 118.36 Immanuel Kant, Critique of Pure Reason (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), p. 273.37 Nancy emphasizes that the Kantian subject produces unity of images as successive. “That is its primary schematism, or its pure imagination, the condition of possibility of any image, of any (re)presentation: the condition for their being an image, and not a chaotic flux (without this singular image being simply one and unified: what it does, simply, is present itself).” Jean-Luc Nancy, The Ground of the Image (New York : Fordham University Press, 2005), pp. 81–82.38 Jean-Luc Nancy, The Ground of the Image, p. 82.39 Immanuel Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, p. 272.40 Immanuel Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, p. 273.41 In Derrida, photographs are understood as metonymical remains: in the fragmentary paralogic of photographic visuality, what is accidental is also essential and inevitable. Contrary to the metaphorical disposition of painting, photographic picture is technological remains, a ruin of the past percpetion, which depends of the rhetoric of metonymy. “It thus seems impossible, and that's the whole paradox, to stop this metonymic substitution. There is nothing but proper names, and yet everything remains metonymic.” Jacques Derrida, Athens, Still Remains. The Photographs of Jean-Francois Bonhomme (New York: Fordham University Press 2010), p. 3.42 Martin Crowley, “Cutting and Letting-Be”, in Nancy and Visual Culture, eds. Carrie Giunta and Adrienne Janus (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2016), p. 23.43 Martin Crowley, “Cutting and Letting-Be”, p. 23.44 The very condition of Nancy's \\\"touching by seeing\\\" is a functional technology of its metonymical stopping. Photography does the same thing—it suspends what would otherwise escape, holds it back before our gaze. Nancy explains this synesthetic expectation of touching by seeing as a technological ex-scription, ex-pression from one body into another. Such a touch is inseparable from cultural technical supplementarity, from “syncope inserted between contact surfaces and interrupting direct contact: Without this différance, there would be no contact as such; contact would not appear; but with this différance, contact never appears in its full purity, never in any immediate plenitude, either. In both cases, the phenomenality, or the phenomenology, of contact is interrupted or diverted; it is suspended in view of contact.” Jacques Derrida, On Touching, p. 229.45 Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987), p. 64.46 Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting, p. 63.47 According to Derrida, “when Kant replies to our question ‘What is a frame?’ by saying: it’s a parergon, a hybrid of outside and inside, but a hybrid which is not a mixture or a half-measure, an outside which is called to the inside of the inside in order to constitute it as an inside; and when he gives as examples of the parergon, alongside the frame, clothing and column, we ask to see, we say to ourselves that there are ‘great difficulties’ here, and that the choice of examples, and their association, is not self-evident.” Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting, p. 63–64.48 Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting, p. 63.49 Derrida claims that Kant finds parergon dangerous by its excess: “Because reason is ‘conscious of its impotence to satisfy its moral need,’ it has recourse to the par ergon, to grace, to mystery, to miracles. It needs the supplementary work. This additive, to be sure, is threatening.” Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting, 56. In Derrida, on the contrary, parergon comes in addition to the work, and is welcomed as its inevitable accessory, by remaining neither simply outside nor simply inside.50 Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting, p. 73.51 Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting, p. 54.52 Nancy observes that the genre of portrait is based on supposition of self-expression, ex-pression of the soul by corporeal techné, by technology of muscles and nerves of the body. If one can be recognized after her portrait, it is not because portrait represents or reproduces the pictured person: “the portrait does not constitute simply a revelation of an identity”; its aim “is no longer to reproduce, therefore, not even to reveal, but to produce the exposition of the subject. To pro-duce it: to bring it forth, to draw it out.” Jean-Luc Nancy, Portrait (New York: Fordham University Press 2018), p. 14.53 Jacques Derrida, “Une certaine possibilité impossible de dire l'événement,” in Dire l'événement, est-ce possible?, eds. Jacques Derrida, Soussana Gad and Alexis Nouss (Paris: L'Harmattan, 2001), p. 89.54 Jacques Derrida, op. cit., p. 89.Additional informationNotes on contributorsMichaela FišerováMichaela Fišerová is Associate Professor at Metropolitan University Prague (Czech Republic). She specializes in political philosophy, aesthetics, and media studies. She is the author of the monographs Sharing the Visible: Rethinking Foucault (Paris, 2013), Image and Power: Interviews with French Thinkers (Prague, 2015), Deconstruction of Signature (Prague, 2016), and Fragmentary Vision: Rancière, Derrida, Nancy (Prague, 2019). Her new monograph Event of Signature. Jacques Derrida and Repeating the Unrepeatable is to be published with SUNY Press (New York, 2022).\",\"PeriodicalId\":360932,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Law and Literature\",\"volume\":\"70 1\",\"pages\":\"0\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-05-30\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Law and Literature\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1080/1535685x.2023.2213578\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"\",\"JCRName\":\"\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Law and Literature","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/1535685x.2023.2213578","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
正如凯利·盖茨所言,生物识别的权威性依赖于与身体的直接联系:“生物识别技术有望稳定身份的混乱模糊性,自动从身体上直接读取稳定的个人身份。”为了有效,生物识别技术在身份和身体之间建立的联系必须显得自然和不言而喻。”凯利·a·盖茨,《我们的生物识别未来》。面部识别技术与监控文化。(纽约:纽约大学,2011年),第14.13页。盖茨认为,“生物特征来源于并直接与身体联系的假设,掩盖了一个复杂的中介技术过程,以及一整套为生物特征识别创造可能性的历史关系。”凯利·a·盖茨,《我们的生物识别未来》。凯利·a·盖茨:《我们的生物识别技术的未来》,第23.15页。盖茨观察到,“我们可以很轻松地把它们从我们的身体中分离出来,给它们拍照,把这些图像当作物体本身。”我们被拍照的脸并没有削弱我们的主体性、我们的身份或我们与他人的关系。相反,摄影现在被用作构建、促进和增强它对人类意义的这些维度的手段。当然,它也被用来以我们无法控制的方式对我们进行分类和个性化。”Kelly a . Gates, Our Biometric Future,第23.16页https://ultimateclassicrock.com/rolling-stones-arrest-history/17 http://www.feelnumb.com/2015/08/26/prince-mugshot-jackson-mississippi-arrest-1980/18 https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/news/hugh-grant-arrest-mugshot-divine-brown-sex-worker-twitter-a9233586.html19正如雅各布斯所说,“在拍摄过程中,你的拍摄对象几乎不停地在拍摄之间移动,而成功的肖像拍摄依赖于友好的关系来发出‘停在那里’的信号。”Lou Jacobs, The Art of pose (Buffalo: Amherst Media, 2010), p. 7.20 Natalie Dybisz, Creative Portrait Photography。《揭示内心主体的创新数字肖像》(东苏塞克斯:the Ilex Press, 2012),第8.21页。Natalie Dybisz,《创意肖像摄影》,第6.22页。路易斯·马林,《国王肖像》(Macmillan, 1988),第23-33页,摄影肖像产生与绘画肖像相同的“表现效果”。这两种方法都能产生对照片人物的象征性和强有力的表现。然而,与马林的作品不同的是,我对两种特定类型的区分有助于理解摄影中同一个人的两种不同的话语表现方式。23 https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw09606/Mick-Jagger24 https://cz.pinterest.com/pin/92746073556000867/25 https://www.pinterest.fr/pin/860469072528798660/26雅克·德里达,《痕迹与档案,影像与艺术》(巴黎:Ina Éditions 2014),第39.27页。雅克·德里达(巴黎:加利利,2007),页11 - 12.28 jean - luc南希,椭圆的意义上说,“在德里达:一个关键的读者,埃德。大卫伍德(牛津:布莱克威尔,1992),p。39.29雅克·德里达,跟踪档案,图片等艺术(2014年巴黎:在版本),p。37.30雅克·德里达,跟踪档案,等艺术形象,p。38.31看到Jakub玛莎的帐户deconstructable paralogic Jakub玛莎的模范,“模范的逻辑,“法律与文学34。不。雅克·德里达,《论触摸》(斯坦福:斯坦福大学出版社2005年),第17.33页。雅克·德里达,《哀悼的工作》(芝加哥:芝加哥大学,2001年),第61.34页。和任何遗留物一样,煤渣的存在是不完整的,它的部分特征迫使人们回忆起过去的事件,它是过去的遗留物。在这个意义上,摄影和煤渣激起了同样的对回归过去的转喻期待:如果我触摸煤渣,我不会触摸火;如果我看到一张照片,我看不到过去的事情。见Jacques Derrida, Feu la centrre (Paris: Des femmes 1987),第19.35页,Jean-Claude Lebensztejn,“从框架出发(Vignettes)”,《解构与视觉艺术》。艺术,媒体,建筑,编。伊曼努尔·康德:《纯粹理性批判》(剑桥:剑桥大学出版社,1998年),第273.37页。南希强调康德的主体作为连续的意象产生统一。"这是它的基本图式,或它的纯粹想象,是任何图像,任何(再)呈现的可能性的条件:它们是一个图像,而不是一个混乱的流动的条件(没有这个单一的图像是简单的和统一的:它所做的,简单地,是呈现它自己)"jean - luc南希,图像的地面(纽约:福特汉姆大学出版社,2005),页81 - 82.38 jean - luc南希,地上的形象,p。82.39伊曼努尔·康德,纯粹理性的批判,p . 272。 40伊曼纽尔·康德,《纯粹理性批判》,第273.41页在德里达那里,照片被理解为转喻的遗骸:在摄影视觉性的残缺的谬误中,偶然的东西也是本质的和不可避免的。与绘画的隐喻倾向相反,摄影图像是技术的遗迹,是过去感知的废墟,依赖于转喻的修辞。“因此,阻止这种转喻替代似乎是不可能的,这就是整个悖论。除了专有名词,什么也没有,但一切都是转喻。”雅克·德里达《雅典,依然存在》让-弗朗索瓦·博纳姆的照片(纽约:福特汉姆大学出版社2010年),第3.42页马丁·克劳利,“切割和放任”,在南希和视觉文化,编辑。马丁·克劳利:《切割与放任》,第23.44页。南希“见而触之”的条件正是其转喻式停止的功能技术。摄影也做同样的事情——它把原本会逃逸的东西悬浮起来,把它挡在我们的眼前。南希解释了这种对触摸的联觉期待,视之为一种技术描述,一种从一个身体到另一个身体的表达。这种接触离不开文化技术的补充,离不开在接触表面之间插入的“晕厥”和打断直接接触:没有这种差异,就不会有这样的接触;接触不会出现;但是,由于这种差异,接触从来没有表现出完全的纯洁,也从来没有表现出任何直接的充实。在这两种情况下,接触的现象性或现象学都被打断或转移了;鉴于接触,该航班已暂停。”雅克·德里达:《绘画中的真理》(芝加哥:芝加哥大学出版社,1987),第64.46页。雅克·德里达:《绘画中的真理》,第63.47页。根据德里达的说法,“当康德回答我们的问题‘什么是框架?他这样说:它是一个parergon,是外部和内部的混合体,但这种混合体不是混合物或半成品,而是一个外部被召唤到内部的内部,以构成它的内部;当他给出parparon的例子时,在框架,衣服和柱子旁边,我们要求看到,我们对自己说,这里有'很大的困难',例子的选择,以及它们之间的联系,不是不言而喻的。”雅克·德里达:《绘画中的真理》,第63-64.48页。德里达认为康德认为过分的理性是危险的:“因为理性‘意识到它无力满足它的道德需要’,所以它求助于理性、求助于恩典、求助于神秘、求助于奇迹。需要补充工作。当然,这种添加剂是有威胁的。”雅克·德里达,《绘画中的真理》,56页。相反,在德里达那里,伙伴关系是工作之外的东西,作为工作不可避免的附属品而受到欢迎,既不简单地留在外面,也不简单地留在里面雅克·德里达,《绘画中的真理》,第73.51页,第54.52页南希观察到,肖像的流派是基于自我表达的假设,通过身体的技术,通过身体的肌肉和神经的技术来表达灵魂。如果一个人在她的肖像之后可以被认出来,那并不是因为肖像代表或再现了被描绘的人:“肖像并不仅仅构成对身份的揭示”;它的目的不再是再现,因此,甚至不是揭示,而是产生对主体的阐述。制造它,把它带出来,把它抽出来。”jean - luc南希,肖像(纽约:福特汉姆大学出版社2018年版),p。14.53雅克·德里达,”一个certaine一不可能说l 'evenement,“在可怕的l 'evenement,是否可能?, eds。雅克·德里达,苏萨娜·盖德和亚历克西斯·努斯(巴黎:L'Harmattan出版社,2001),第89.54页。smichaela FišerováMichaela Fišerová是布拉格城市大学(捷克共和国)的副教授。她的专长是政治哲学、美学和媒体研究。她著有专著《分享可见:重新思考福柯》(巴黎,2013年)、《图像与权力:采访法国思想家》(布拉格,2015年)、《签名的解构》(布拉格,2016年)和《碎片视觉:朗西弗瑞、德里达、南希》(布拉格,2019年)。她的新专著《签名事件》。雅克·德里达和《重复不可重复》将由纽约州立大学出版社出版(纽约,2022年)。
Portrait and Mugshot: Metonymical Foundation of Photographic Genres
AbstractThis article focuses on the genre distinction between artistic and legal photographs of faces: while the artistic portrait tends to express the singular soul of the person pictured, the biometric mugshot aims to scan singular physical traits without any psychological expression. How do these photographic genres allow us to identify the represented person? What do each of them seek to recognize? To grasp our metaphysical expectations of photographic technology, and thus to bridge the gap between discursive styles of these two photographic genres, I revise Derrida’s deconstruction of the law of genre. Further, I argue that Derrida’s and Nancy’s subversive readings of Kant’s concepts of parergon and schema help us to understand the rhetorical setting of the human mind, which organizes the photographic work of framing fragments. Finally, I explain the metaphysical conditions of possibility for both photographic genres by situating their opposite goals in the interval of personal recognition constructed by metonymical schematism.Keywords: photographygenreexpressionmetonymyrecognitionImmanuel KantJacques DerridaJean-Luc Nancy Notes1 This paper is the result of Metropolitan University Prague research project no. 93–01 “Political Science, Media and Anglophone Studies” (2022) based on a grant from the Institutional Fund for the Long-term Strategic Development of Research Organizations.2 See Kendall L. Walton, “Transparent Pictures: On the Nature of Photographic Realism,” Critical Inquiry 11, no. 2 (1984), pp. 246–277 and Catharine Abell, “The Epistemic Value of Photographs,” in Philosophical Perspecives on Depiction, eds. Catharina Abell and Katerina Bantinaki (Oxford: Oxford University Press 2010), pp. 81–103.3 The topic of photographic realism has been discussed many times in philosophy, aesthetics, and theory of art. Roland Barthes, among others, contributed to this discussion in his Camera Lucida, where he mentions the photographic imprint of light is capable of keeping us un touch with the past pictured. Not only it let us believe that “this-has-been,” it even produces illusion of emanation of the pictured events. See Roland Barthes, Camera Lucida. Note on Photography (New York: Hill and Wang 1981), pp. 80–81. Derrida himself admits that “It is in this way that I would be tempted to understand what Barthes called ‘emanation’. This flow of light which captures or possesses me, invests me, invades me, or envelops me is not a ray of light, but the source of possible view: from the point of view of the other.” Jacques Derrida, Bernard Stiegler, Echographies of Television (New York: Polity Press 2002), pp. 122–123. In this respect, Derrida shares with the late Barthes his suggestion of a double reception of photographic pictures, but instead of keeping Barthes‘conceptual polarity of studium and punctum as an unbridgeable binary opposition between the conventional and the dreamy mode of reception, he suggests understanding it as two poles delimiting the interval of gaze, where an encounter with imaginary “spectres” occurs.4 Jacques Derrida, “The Law of Genre,” Critical Inquiry 7, no. 1 (1980): p. 56.5 Jacques Derrida, “The Law of Genre,” p. 56.6 Jacques Derrida, “The Law of Genre,” p. 57.7 Jacques Derrida, “Force of Law,” in Deconstruction and the Possibility of Justice, eds. Drucilla Cornell, Michel Rosenfeld and David Gray Carlson (New York: Routledge 1992), p. 16.8 Jacques Derrida, “Force of Law,” p. 25.9 Petra Gehring, “Force and ‘Mystical Foundation’ of Law: How Jacques Derrida Addresses Legal Discourse,” German Law Journal 6, no. 1 (2005): p. 163.10 This topic is elaborated in Fišerová’s paper “On Deferral,” where she explains Derrida’s interest in Kafka’s literary work, in his subversive understanding of parasitical legal representation. See Michaela Fišerová, “On Deferral. Kafka and Derrida before the Law,” in Lessons from Kafka, eds. Tomáš Koblížek, Petr Koťátko (Praha: Filosofia 2021), p. 183–205.11 As Max M. Houck explains, alongside the standardized double—front view and profile—photographic image of the criminal’s face, Bertillon entered his measurements on a data card, with additional information such as hair, beard, and eye color. These photographs were the precursors to today’s “mugshots.” Bertillon called his cards a portrait parlé, a spoken portrait, that described the criminal both through measurements and words. Later on, Bertillon developed this evidence picture into a “metric” photography based on the rule of absence of facial expression that he expected to help him “precisely reconstruct the dimension of a particular space and the placement of objects in it, or to measure the object represented.” Max M. Houck, Forensic Science: Modern Methods of Solving Crime. (London: Praeger, 2007), p. 26.12 As Kelly Gates puts it, the authority of biometric identification relies on a direct link to bodies: “biometric technologies promise to stabilize the messy ambiguity of identity, to automatically read a stable, individual identity directly off the body. To be effective, the connection that biometric technologies establish between identity and the body must appear natural and self-evident.” Kelly A. Gates, Our Biometric Future. Facial Recognition Technology and the Culture of Surveillance. (New York: New York University, 2011), p. 14.13 According to Gates, “the assumption that biometrics are derived from and link directly to physical bodies conceals a complex technological process of mediation, as well as a whole set of historical relationships that create the very conditions of possibility for biometric identification.” Kelly A. Gates, Our Biometric Future. Facial Recognition Technology and the Culture of Surveillance, p. 15.14 Kelly A. Gates, Our Biometric Future, p. 23.15 Gates observes that “we are perfectly comfortable cutting them off from our bodies by photographing them and treating those images as objects-in-themselves. Our photographed faces do not diminish our subjectivities, our identities, or our relations with others. Rather, photography is now used as a means of constructing, facilitating, and enhancing these dimensions of what it means to human. Of course it is also used to classify and individuate us in ways over which we have no control.” Kelly A. Gates, Our Biometric Future, p. 23.16 https://ultimateclassicrock.com/rolling-stones-arrest-history/17 http://www.feelnumb.com/2015/08/26/prince-mugshot-jackson-mississippi-arrest-1980/18 https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/news/hugh-grant-arrest-mugshot-divine-brown-sex-worker-twitter-a9233586.html19 As Jacobs puts it, “During a session, your subject moves almost continually between shots, and successful portraits depend on friendly rapport to signal ‘stop there’.” Lou Jacobs, The Art of Posing (Buffalo: Amherst Media, 2010), p. 7.20 Natalie Dybisz, Creative Portrait Photography. Innovative Digital Portraiture to Reveal the Inner Subject (East Sussex: The Ilex Press, 2012), p. 8.21 Natalie Dybisz, Creative Portrait Photography, p. 6.22 Photographic portrait produces the same “effects of representation” as painted portrait in Louis Marin, Portrait of the King (Macmillan, 1988), pp. 23–33. Both generate signifying and powerful representation of a pictured person. However, unlike Marin’s work, my distinction of two specific genres helps to understand two divergent discursive ways of representation of the same person in photography.23 https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw09606/Mick-Jagger24 https://cz.pinterest.com/pin/92746073556000867/25 https://www.pinterest.fr/pin/860469072528798660/26 Jacques Derrida, Trace et archive, image et art (Paris: Ina Éditions 2014), p. 39.27 Jean-Luc Nancy, A plus d'un titre. Jacques Derrida (Paris: Galilée, 2007), pp. 11–12.28 Jean-Luc Nancy, “Elliptical Sense,” in Derrida: a Critical Reader, ed. David Wood (Oxford: Blackwell, 1992), p. 39.29 Jacques Derrida, Trace et archive, image et art (Paris: Ina Éditions 2014), p. 37.30 Jacques Derrida, Trace et archive, image et art, p. 38.31 See Jakub Mácha’s account of the deconstructable paralogic of exemplarity in Jakub Mácha, “The Logic of Exemplarity,” Law and Literature 34. no. 1 (2020): 67–81.32 Jacques Derrida, On Touching (Stanford: Stanford University Press 2005), p. 17.33 Jacques Derrida, The Work of Mourning (Chicago: The University of Chicago, 2001), p. 61.34 In Feu la cendre Derrida deals with the metonymy of cinders. As any remain, cinders haunts by its incomplete presence, its partial character that forces to recall the past event, of which it is a remain. In this sense, photography and cinders provoke the same metonymical expectation of returning the past: if I touch cinders, I do not touch fire; if I see a photograph, I do not see the past event. See Jacques Derrida, Feu la cendre (Paris: Des femmes 1987), p. 19.35 Jean-Claude Lebensztejn, “Starting out from the Frame (Vignettes),” in Deconstruction and the Visual Arts. Art, Media, Architecture, eds. Peter Brunette and David Wills (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994), p. 118.36 Immanuel Kant, Critique of Pure Reason (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), p. 273.37 Nancy emphasizes that the Kantian subject produces unity of images as successive. “That is its primary schematism, or its pure imagination, the condition of possibility of any image, of any (re)presentation: the condition for their being an image, and not a chaotic flux (without this singular image being simply one and unified: what it does, simply, is present itself).” Jean-Luc Nancy, The Ground of the Image (New York : Fordham University Press, 2005), pp. 81–82.38 Jean-Luc Nancy, The Ground of the Image, p. 82.39 Immanuel Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, p. 272.40 Immanuel Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, p. 273.41 In Derrida, photographs are understood as metonymical remains: in the fragmentary paralogic of photographic visuality, what is accidental is also essential and inevitable. Contrary to the metaphorical disposition of painting, photographic picture is technological remains, a ruin of the past percpetion, which depends of the rhetoric of metonymy. “It thus seems impossible, and that's the whole paradox, to stop this metonymic substitution. There is nothing but proper names, and yet everything remains metonymic.” Jacques Derrida, Athens, Still Remains. The Photographs of Jean-Francois Bonhomme (New York: Fordham University Press 2010), p. 3.42 Martin Crowley, “Cutting and Letting-Be”, in Nancy and Visual Culture, eds. Carrie Giunta and Adrienne Janus (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2016), p. 23.43 Martin Crowley, “Cutting and Letting-Be”, p. 23.44 The very condition of Nancy's "touching by seeing" is a functional technology of its metonymical stopping. Photography does the same thing—it suspends what would otherwise escape, holds it back before our gaze. Nancy explains this synesthetic expectation of touching by seeing as a technological ex-scription, ex-pression from one body into another. Such a touch is inseparable from cultural technical supplementarity, from “syncope inserted between contact surfaces and interrupting direct contact: Without this différance, there would be no contact as such; contact would not appear; but with this différance, contact never appears in its full purity, never in any immediate plenitude, either. In both cases, the phenomenality, or the phenomenology, of contact is interrupted or diverted; it is suspended in view of contact.” Jacques Derrida, On Touching, p. 229.45 Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987), p. 64.46 Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting, p. 63.47 According to Derrida, “when Kant replies to our question ‘What is a frame?’ by saying: it’s a parergon, a hybrid of outside and inside, but a hybrid which is not a mixture or a half-measure, an outside which is called to the inside of the inside in order to constitute it as an inside; and when he gives as examples of the parergon, alongside the frame, clothing and column, we ask to see, we say to ourselves that there are ‘great difficulties’ here, and that the choice of examples, and their association, is not self-evident.” Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting, p. 63–64.48 Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting, p. 63.49 Derrida claims that Kant finds parergon dangerous by its excess: “Because reason is ‘conscious of its impotence to satisfy its moral need,’ it has recourse to the par ergon, to grace, to mystery, to miracles. It needs the supplementary work. This additive, to be sure, is threatening.” Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting, 56. In Derrida, on the contrary, parergon comes in addition to the work, and is welcomed as its inevitable accessory, by remaining neither simply outside nor simply inside.50 Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting, p. 73.51 Jacques Derrida, The Truth in Painting, p. 54.52 Nancy observes that the genre of portrait is based on supposition of self-expression, ex-pression of the soul by corporeal techné, by technology of muscles and nerves of the body. If one can be recognized after her portrait, it is not because portrait represents or reproduces the pictured person: “the portrait does not constitute simply a revelation of an identity”; its aim “is no longer to reproduce, therefore, not even to reveal, but to produce the exposition of the subject. To pro-duce it: to bring it forth, to draw it out.” Jean-Luc Nancy, Portrait (New York: Fordham University Press 2018), p. 14.53 Jacques Derrida, “Une certaine possibilité impossible de dire l'événement,” in Dire l'événement, est-ce possible?, eds. Jacques Derrida, Soussana Gad and Alexis Nouss (Paris: L'Harmattan, 2001), p. 89.54 Jacques Derrida, op. cit., p. 89.Additional informationNotes on contributorsMichaela FišerováMichaela Fišerová is Associate Professor at Metropolitan University Prague (Czech Republic). She specializes in political philosophy, aesthetics, and media studies. She is the author of the monographs Sharing the Visible: Rethinking Foucault (Paris, 2013), Image and Power: Interviews with French Thinkers (Prague, 2015), Deconstruction of Signature (Prague, 2016), and Fragmentary Vision: Rancière, Derrida, Nancy (Prague, 2019). Her new monograph Event of Signature. Jacques Derrida and Repeating the Unrepeatable is to be published with SUNY Press (New York, 2022).