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Journal Article
Public Culture (2020) 32 (1): 185–213.
Published: 01 January 2020
... to privacy infringement in today’s professed democracies. Copyright © 2020 by Duke University Press 2020 extraterritorial images privacy surveillance visual archives In the years and decades following Germany’s surrender at the end of the Second World War, many former Nazi officials explained...
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2015) 27 (2 (76)): 331–359.
Published: 01 May 2015
... violence to illuminate the relationship between economic privatization and privacy in India today. 2015 call centers cars class India masculinity rape culture violence The protests initially provoked by the gang rape and murder of a physiotherapy student on a bus in New Delhi...
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2013) 25 (2 70): 307–310.
Published: 01 March 2013
...Wolfgang Pietsch This is a plea for democratic supervision and regulation of the large data sets that are currently being collected all over the digital world — a plea driven not by fears for the privacy of the individual but by worries that a privileged knowledge of the mechanics governing...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2019) 31 (3): 625–644.
Published: 01 September 2019
... crimes such as domestic violence, sexual assault, and sex work or sex trafficking. Thus women, sex workers, and gender-nonconforming people may be disproportionately excluded from any benefits of bodycam surveillance. But privacy and dignity interests, as well as investigatory realities, preclude...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2001) 13 (2): 333–336.
Published: 01 May 2001
... benefits afforded by “total lack of privacy,” with male cadets under constant observation even while in “gang bathrooms.”1 Admitting women, the school suc- cessfully convinced a federal district court judge, would have one of two unac- ceptable consequences: either...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1994) 6 (2): 263–292.
Published: 01 May 1994
... . 1993. “Moscow Privatization Yields Privacy and Problems,” The New York Times , 28 February 1993. Bourdieu , Pierre . 1984. Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste. Trans. By Richard Nice. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. Boym , Svetlana . 1994...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2021) 33 (2 (94)): 137–147.
Published: 01 May 2021
..., but also risk infringing on the rights to privacy, autonomy, and informational self-determination of the participating individual. Decentralized solutions, by contrast, give users greater control over their data, but also limit the ability of officials to launch targeted public-health interventions...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2015) 27 (2 (76)): 213–219.
Published: 01 May 2015
... privacy and methodology and the value of such data collection. And while I remain personally dubious about whether it will actually tell us much that’s new about the complex interactions between human bodies, proteins, nutrients, and our environments (both material and social), I also remain agnostic...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1999) 11 (3): 428–430.
Published: 01 September 1999
... unashamed in its self- exposure: “I am seen, revealed in all my flaws—therefore I am”? ✦ ✦ ✦ In Tabata’s self-documentation, we see a man in the privacy of his home engaged in mundane rituals...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1995) 8 (1): 73–100.
Published: 01 January 1995
... relations in the production of anthropological knowl- 75 edge. This essay seeks to expand the boundaries of “the field” and how we think of Rites of Queer Passage our relations within it. I treat not workperse, but rather the equally phantasmatic Western pursuits of “leisure time” and “privacy .” I...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1999) 11 (3): 424–427.
Published: 01 September 1999
... assistance into the manufacture of poignancy. Where private life requires public assistance, publicity (as an evidence-gathering or verificatory practice) requires the surgical abolishment of privacy. Proof of the necessity of assistance...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1997) 10 (1): 83–113.
Published: 01 January 1997
... in the morning in the relative privacy of their separate houses, it is a common activity of a particular form. But it can also be a prayer that is offered by the same devotees standing in the waters of a river or the courtyard of a temple. They share a material-spatial context, but their acts are still...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2020) 32 (3 (92)): 491–512.
Published: 01 September 2020
... to the respectability politics of what one of us ( Nash 2016 ) has previously termed “widowing,” Fulton’s does so in subtle reframings and through elision — what we’ll call strategic privacies, something akin to Darlene Clark Hine’s (1989) conception of the culture of dissemblance. McSpadden’s work, however, performs...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1988) 1 (1): 39–51.
Published: 01 January 1988
... unitary way as the undifferentiated opposite of discursive privacy. Rather, publicity is understood differentiatedly, on the assumption that it is possible to identify a plurality of distinct discourse publics and to theorize the relations among them. Clearly, publics can be distinguished...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2015) 27 (2 (76)): 197–199.
Published: 01 May 2015
... the relationship between economic privatization and privacy in India today. The issue’s first set of research essays comprises two important contributions to current debates about the distribution of agency across human and nonhuman entities. In “Mediants, Materiality, Normativity,” Arjun Appadurai contends...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2023) 35 (2 (100)): 207–231.
Published: 01 May 2023
... considered inalienable. Many of these lawsuits compared the illicit capture and sale of photographs to the slave trade, and, in the wake of abolition, reformers focused their attentions on privacy law. 18 Claims against the injurious commodification of white, bourgeois personhood saw immediate results...
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2002) 14 (1): 277–279.
Published: 01 January 2002
... modernity. The result is ambiguity—or rather, modernity with a dif- ference. Islamist collective imaginaries of private and public are a case in point. The importance attributed to visual privacy—the veil used as a symbolic shield in public...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1997) 9 (3): 377–393.
Published: 01 September 1997
... of “negative” and “positive” liberties. Negative liberties, as Isaiah Berlin has described them, are those freedoms- for example, a right of free speech, a right of freedom of mobility, a right to privacy-the broad exercise of which imply the negation of power (of the state, the community...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2011) 23 (2): 377–394.
Published: 01 May 2011
... emptiness; beds of those who had passed away, but that were still made everyday, beds turned into shrines, with photos and sandals on them” (quoted in Sinha 2003). Singh’s work hints at the constant intersection between the public figure and the notion of privacy, etched into the silent histories...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2009) 21 (2): 321–342.
Published: 01 May 2009
..., United Kingdom, July 16, 2006. The names have been changed to protect the interviewees’ privacy. 339 Public Culture dicaments of the subaltern middle classes, which may be symptomatic of the his- tory...