Results for 'Panopticon'

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  1.  38
    The Panopticon Writings.Jeremy Bentham - 2011 - Verso Books. Edited by Miran Bo\V. Zovi\V. C..
    The Panopticon project for a model prison obsessed the English philosopher Jeremy Bentham for almost 20 years. In the end, the project came to nothing; the Panopticon was never built. But it is precisely this that makes the Panopticon project the best exemplification of Bentham’s own theory of fictions, according to which non-existent fictitious entities can have all too real effects. There is probably no building that has stirred more philosophical controversy than Bentham’s Panopticon. The (...) is not merely, as Foucault thought, “a cruel, ingenious cage”, in which subjects collaborate in their own subjection, but much more—constructing the Panopticon produces not only a prison, but also a god within it. The Panopticon is a machine which on assembly is already inhabited by a ghost. It is through the Panopticon and the closely related theory of fictions that Bentham has made his greatest impact on modern thought; above all, on the theory of power. The Panopticon writings are frequently cited, rarely read. This edition contains the complete “Panopticon Letters”, together with selections from “Panopticon Postscript I” and “Fragment on Ontology”, Bentham’s fullest account of fictions. A comprehensive introduction by Miran Bozovic explores the place of Panopticon in contemporary theoretical debate. (shrink)
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  2. The Panopticon Factor: Privacy and Surveillance in the Digital Age.Jordanco Sekulovski - 2016 - Project Innovative Ethics 1 (9).
    This paper questions the use of new technologies as tools of modern surveillance in order to: (a) advance the research done by Michel Foucault on panoptic techniques of surveillance and dominance; and (b) give new insights on the way we use these new surveillance technologies in violation of democratic principles and legal norms. Furthermore, it questions Foucault’s statements on the expansion of Bentham’s Panopticon scheme as a universal model of modern-day democratic institutions. Therefore the purpose of this paper is (...)
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  3.  4
    Digital Society : Mobile Panopticon. 박정희 - 2018 - Journal of the Daedong Philosophical Association 85:223-247.
    In this paper, we discussed how Digital Panopticon appears to be a chain of monitoring and control in modern society. Bentham presented the concept and design of the Panopticon in the sense that prisoners who feel the attention of invisible monitors are better enlightened. Michel Foucault saw the concept of Bentham’s Panopticon as a modern society in which everyone watched without a monitor. The modern society can now be called a "digital Panopticon" where individuals are controlled (...)
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  4.  17
    Participatory panopticon: Thomas Mott Osborne's prison democracy.Shai Gortler - 2022 - Constellations 29 (3):343-358.
    Constellations, Volume 29, Issue 3, Page 343-358, September 2022.
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  5.  13
    The Panopticon Revisitied Surveillence, Discipline, and the Modern Political Order.Birol Akduman - forthcoming - Arete Political Philosophy Journal.
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  6.  61
    Jenni Fagan’s The Panopticon (2012).Diane Leblond - 2022 - Revue D’Études Benthamiennes 22.
    In her 2012 novel The Panopticon, Jenni Fagan chose to examine the possibility of emancipation from within the care system, and between the walls of an institution modelled on Bentham’s 18th century eponymous invention. Setting the adventures of Anais, an orphan and chronic offender, in that building, testifies to the persistence of the master trope of surveillance, which turns the visual world of the novel into an anxiety-ridden field of observation and control. The reference to disciplinary and punitive visuality (...)
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  7.  20
    The portable panopticon: morality and mobile technologies.Martin De Saulles & David S. Horner - 2011 - Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society 9 (3):206-216.
    PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to explore ethical issues arising from the mass deployment and take‐up of mobile technologies.Design/methodology/approachThe ethical dimensions of mobile technologies and their use among the general population are considered within a conceptual framework drawing on James Moor's belief in a need for “better ethics” for emerging technologies and Michel Foucault's development of Jeremy Bentham's panopticon as a tool of surveillance.FindingsIt is found that the mass deployment and use of mobile technologies amongst the general population (...)
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  8.  22
    All Seeing Archaeology: The Panopticons of Pentridge Prison.Adam Ford Fsa - 2021 - Revue D’Études Benthamiennes 19.
    Archaeological excavations carried out at Pentridge Prison discovered the ruins and foundations of three panopticon exercise yards. This paper details the scope and observations of the excavation program and discusses the influence of Jeremy Bentham’s panopticon model on penal reform and prison design in Australia in the middle of the 19th Century.
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  9.  48
    The plague and the Panopticon: Camus, with and against the total critiques of modernity.Matthew Sharpe - 2016 - Thesis Eleven 133 (1):59-79.
    Albert Camus’s 1947 novel La Peste and 1948 drama L’État de Siège, allegories of totalitarian power using the figure of the plague, remarkably anticipate Foucault’s celebrated genealogical analyses of modern power. Indeed, reading Foucault after Camus highlights a fact little-remarked in Discipline and Punish: namely, that the famous chapter on the ‘Panopticon’ begins by analysing the measures taken in early modern Vincennes following the advent of plague. Part III argues that, although Camus was cited as an inspiration by the (...)
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  10. Escaping the Panopticon: Utopia, Hegemony, and Performance in Peter Weir's The Truman Show.Dusty Lavoie - 2011 - Utopian Studies 22 (1):52-73.
    ABSTRACT Peter Weir's The Truman Show has been studied as an example of Debord's theory of the spectacle; as such, many theorists have shown how Truman is a commodified object constructed for “entertainment” for the masses, also noting how we ourselves are complicit in the consumption of media that dehumanize. In this essay, the author argues that, while a decided exemplar of postmodernism's “society of the spectacle,” the film is also a corporealization of poststructuralist Michel Foucault's concept of the (...), illustrating how a consideration of social spaces yields a fuller understanding of Truman's predicament as knowing prisoner/performer. Through an analysis of power, ideology, hegemony, and whiteness as they are re-presented in The Truman Show, we can more thoroughly articulate Truman's condition as a panoptic object who is regulated and hegemonized under the watchful eyes of a Master—himself synecdochic of Authority, Reason, and Truth—and those of a voracious public. The result is an indeterminate, postmodern, dystopian vision of mediated masses and the power apparatuses they/we wield through the act of watching. (shrink)
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  11.  33
    Electronic health record as a panopticon: A disciplinary apparatus in nursing practice.Jessica Dillard-Wright - 2019 - Nursing Philosophy 20 (2):e12239.
    The specific arrangements of power/knowledge that characterize nurse interactions with the electronic health record form a panopticon. As health care moves into the 21st century, sophisticated technologies like the electronic health record shape the terrain of professional possibilities. The longer it is in use, the more it is possible to excavate the inherent disciplinary function of electronic health record. A panopticon is a generalizable, replicable apparatus of power that cultivates discipline when similar behaviours are desired from a group (...)
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  12. Driving to the panopticon: A philosophical exploration of the risks to privacy posed by the information technology of the future.Jeffrey Reiman - 2004 - In Beate Rössler (ed.), Privacies: Philosophical Evaluations. Stanford University Press. pp. 194--214.
     
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  13.  15
    All Seeing Archaeology: The Panopticons of Pentridge Prison.F. S. A. Adam Ford - forthcoming - Revue D’Études Benthamiennes.
    Archaeological excavations carried out at Pentridge Prison discovered the ruins and foundations of three panopticon exercise yards. This paper details the scope and observations of the excavation program and discusses the influence of Jeremy Bentham’s panopticon model on penal reform and prison design in Australia in the middle of the 19th Century.
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  14.  25
    Resisting the Digital Medicine Panopticon: Toward a Bioethics of the Oppressed.Adrian Guta, Jijian Voronka & Marilou Gagnon - 2018 - American Journal of Bioethics 18 (9):62-64.
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  15.  40
    Escaping the Panopticon Over Time: Balancing the Right To Be Forgotten and Freedom of Expression in a Technological Architecture.Ludo Gorzeman & Paulan Korenhof - 2017 - Philosophy and Technology 30 (1):73-92.
    The ‘right to be forgotten’ has been labelled censorship and disastrous for the freedom of expression. In this paper, we explain that effecting the ‘right to be forgotten’ with regard to search results is ‘censorship’ at the level of information retrieval. We however claim it is the least heavy yet most effective means to get the minimum amount of censorship overall, while enabling people to evolve beyond their past opinions. We argue that applying the ‘right to be forgotten’ to search (...)
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  16.  14
    The concert: Mao's panopticon.Sascha Talmor - 1990 - History of European Ideas 12 (6):843-851.
  17.  36
    Nano-Technology and Privacy: On Continuous Surveillance Outside the Panopticon.Jeroen Den Hovevann & Pieter E. Vermaas - 2007 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 32 (3):283-297.
    We argue that nano-technology in the form of invisible tags, sensors, and Radio Frequency Identity Chips (RFIDs) will give rise to privacy issues that are in two ways different from the traditional privacy issues of the last decades. One, they will not exclusively revolve around the idea of centralization of surveillance and concentration of power, as the metaphor of the Panopticon suggests, but will be about constant observation at decentralized levels. Two, privacy concerns may not exclusively be about constraining (...)
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  18.  52
    Personal autonomy in the travel panopticon.Eamon Daly - 2010 - Ethics and Information Technology 12 (2):97-108.
    I argue in this paper that the development and convergence of information and communication technologies (ICT) is creating a global network of surveillance capabilities which affect the traveler. These surveillance capabilities are reminiscent of 18th century philosopher Jeremy Bentham’s panopticon, and as such the emerging global surveillance network has been referred to as the travel panopticon. I argue that the travel panopticon is corrosive of personal autonomy, and in doing so I describe and analyse various philosophical approaches (...)
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  19.  12
    The Electronic Panopticon: A Case Study of the Development of the National Criminal Records System.Diana R. Gordon - 1987 - Politics and Society 15 (4):483-511.
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  20.  77
    The Panopticon reaches within: how digital technology turns us inside out. [REVIEW]Ann Light - 2010 - Identity in the Information Society 3 (3):583-598.
    The convergence of biomedical and information technology holds the potential to alter the discourses of identity, or as is argued here, to turn us inside out. The advent of digital networks makes it possible to ‘see inside’ people in ways not anticipated and thus create new performance arenas for the expression of identity. Drawing on the ideas of Butler and Foucault and theories of performativity, this paper examines a new context for human-computer interaction and articulates potentially disturbing issues with monitoring (...)
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  21.  14
    Pain, pleasure, and the greater good: from the Panopticon to the Skinner box and beyond.Cathy Gere - 2017 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    "Contents "--"Introduction: Diving into the Wreck" -- "1. Trial of the Archangels" -- "2. Epicurus at the Scaffold" -- "3. Nasty, British, and Short" -- "4. The Monkey in the Panopticon" -- "5. In Which We Wonder Who Is Crazy" -- "6. Epicurus Unchained" -- "Afterword: The Restoration of the Monarchy" -- "Notes" -- "Bibliography.
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  22.  34
    The Inverted Eye. Panopticon and Panopticism, Revisited.Petra Gehring - 2017 - Foucault Studies 23:46-62.
    Panopticism is commonly taken to rely on something like a panoptic gaze – a reading of Foucault which still prevails in the discussion of today’s surveillance technologies in the wake of Surveiller et punir. In my re-reading of the relevant chapters of Foucault’s book I argue that the gaze does not occupy a central role in the techniques of discipline and power that Foucault describes. Quite to the contrary, Foucault analyses virtualization and automatization procedures that – after cutting off of (...)
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  23.  30
    Philosophy and the Panopticon.Scott O’Reilly - 2002 - Philosophy Now 36:22-23.
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  24.  12
    Sirens in the Panopticon: Intersections Between Ainslean Picoeconomics and Foucault`s Discipline Theory.Yevhenii Osiievskyi & Maksym Yakovlyev - 2019 - Foucault Studies 27 (27):116-142.
    In this article, we attempt to synthesize the findings of the branch of behavioral economics known as “picoeconomics” with insights from Foucauldian thought in order to demonstrate that a richer and more nuanced understanding of strategies for self-managing human irrationality can be achieved when both approaches are mobilized. Picoeconomic games can be modeled as an intrapsychic exercise of the disciplinary power thereby suggesting an important contributing factor to the formation of effective Ainslean will. On the other hand, picoenomic descriptions of (...)
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  25.  20
    The ranked list as Panopticon in enterprise culture.Lionel Wee - 2011 - Pragmatics and Society 2 (1):37-56.
    The emergence of enterprise culture has raised the issue of how techniques of governmentality are being used to re-make individuals and institutions as bearers of enterprising qualities. This paper examines one such specific technique of governmentality, that of the ranked list. The ranked list is interesting for three reasons. One, just about anything can be ranked. Two, it is a widely accepted and normalized communicative genre. Three, there are properties of the ranked list that make it particularly potent as a (...)
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  26.  38
    The Crowdsourced Panopticon: Conformity and Control on Social Media.Jeremy Weissman - 2021 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Informed by critiques of conformity and mass media by some of the greatest philosophers of the past two centuries, as well as by a wide range of historical and empirical studies, Weissman helps shed light on what may happen when our lives are increasingly broadcast online for everyone all the time, to be judged by the global community.
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  27.  9
    The Crowdsourced Panopticon: Conformity and Control on Social Media.Jeremy Weissman - 2021 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Informed by critiques of conformity and mass media by some of the greatest philosophers of the past two centuries, as well as by a wide range of historical and empirical studies, Weissman helps shed light on what may happen when our lives are increasingly broadcast online for everyone all the time, to be judged by the global community.
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  28.  15
    The Norfolk Island Penal Station, the Panopticon, and Alexander Maconochie’s and Jeremy Bentham’s Theories of Punishment.Tim Causer - 2021 - Revue D’Études Benthamiennes 19.
    Alexander Maconochie, the originator of the “Mark System”, is a major figure in the history of penal discipline and is best known for his attempt to implement it at the Norfolk Island penal station from 1840 to 1844. Among Maconochie’s many works is the eight-page “Comparison Between Mr. Bentham’s Views on Punishment, and Those Advocated in Connexion with the Mark System”, in which Maconochie rejected Bentham’s critique of transportation, as well as fundamental elements of his theory of punishment. Maconochie concluded (...)
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  29.  91
    COVID-19—Extending Surveillance and the Panopticon.Danielle L. Couch, Priscilla Robinson & Paul A. Komesaroff - 2020 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 17 (4):809-814.
    Surveillance is a core function of all public health systems. Responses to the COVID-19 pandemic have deployed traditional public health surveillance responses, such as contact tracing and quarantine, and extended these responses with the use of varied technologies, such as the use of smartphone location data, data networks, ankle bracelets, drones, and big data analysis. Applying Foucault’s (1979) notion of the panopticon, with its twin focus on surveillance and self-regulation, as the preeminent form of social control in modern societies, (...)
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  30.  67
    Nano-technology and privacy: On continuous surveillance outside the panopticon.Jeroen Van Den Hoven & Pieter E. Vermaas - 2007 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 32 (3):283 – 297.
    We argue that nano-technology in the form of invisible tags, sensors, and Radio Frequency Identity Chips (RFIDs) will give rise to privacy issues that are in two ways different from the traditional privacy issues of the last decades. One, they will not exclusively revolve around the idea of centralization of surveillance and concentration of power, as the metaphor of the Panopticon suggests, but will be about constant observation at decentralized levels. Two, privacy concerns may not exclusively be about constraining (...)
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  31. Bentham’s Prison: A Study of the Panopticon Penitentiary.Janet Semple - 1993 - Clarendon Press.
    At the end of the eighteenth century, Jeremy Bentham devised a scheme for a prison that he called the panopticon. It soon became an obsession. For twenty years he tried to build it; in the end he failed, but the story of his attempt offers fascinating insights into both Bentham's complex character and the ideas of the period. Basing her analysis on hitherto unexamined manuscripts, Janet Semple chronicles Bentham's dealings with the politicians as he tried to put his plans (...)
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  32. Jeremy Bentham, The Panopticon Writings (edited by Miran Bozovic).M. Haugaard - 1997 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 5:493-493.
     
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  33.  6
    The radical fool of capitalism: on Jeremy Bentham, the Panopticon, and the Auto-icon.Christian Welzbacher - 2018 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press.
    A fresh interpretation of Jeremy Bentham, finding that his “radical foolery” embodied a social ethics that was revolutionary for its time. Jeremy Bentham (1748–1832) is best remembered today as the founder of utilitarianism (a philosophy infamously abused by the Victorians) and the conceiver of the Panopticon, the circular prison house in which all prisoners could be seen by an unseen observer—later seized upon by Michel Foucault as the apotheosis of the neoliberal control society. In this volume in the Untimely (...)
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  34.  75
    Bentham, Deleuze and Beyond: An Overview of Surveillance Theories from the Panopticon to Participation.Maša Galič, Tjerk Timan & Bert-Jaap Koops - 2017 - Philosophy and Technology 30 (1):9-37.
    This paper aims to provide an overview of surveillance theories and concepts that can help to understand and debate surveillance in its many forms. As scholars from an increasingly wide range of disciplines are discussing surveillance, this literature review can offer much-needed common ground for the debate. We structure surveillance theory in three roughly chronological/thematic phases. The first two conceptualise surveillance through comprehensive theoretical frameworks which are elaborated in the third phase. The first phase, featuring Bentham and Foucault, offers architectural (...)
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  35.  19
    Diminishing I's: The Unnamable's Absent Subjecthood and the Disintegration of Meaning in the Face of Foucault's Panopticon.Mohammadreza Arghiani - 2012 - Philosophy and Literature 36 (2):465-475.
  36.  31
    Cryptography, data retention, and the panopticon society (abstract).Jean-François Blanchette & Deborah G. Johnson - 1998 - Acm Sigcas Computers and Society 28 (2):1-2.
    As we move our social institutions from paper and ink based operations to the electronic medium, we invisibly create a type of surveillance society, a panopticon society. It is not the traditional surveillance society in which government officials follow citizens around because they are concerned about threats to the political order. Instead it is piecemeal surveillance by public and private organizations. Piecemeal though it is, It creates the potential for the old kind of surveillance on an even grander scale. (...)
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  37.  10
    The needle and the damage done: Of haystacks and anxious panopticons.Sarah Logan - 2017 - Big Data and Society 4 (2).
    How should we understand the surveillance state post Snowden? This paper is concerned with the relationship between increased surveillance capacity and state power. The paper begins by analysing two metaphors used in public post Snowden discourse to describe state surveillance practices: the haystack and the panopticon. It argues that these metaphors share a flawed common entailment regarding surveillance, knowledge and power which cannot accurately capture important aspects of state anxiety generated by mass surveillance in an age of big data. (...)
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  38.  13
    The Paradoxes in the Use of the Panopticon as a Theoretical Reference in Urban Video-surveillance Studies: A Case Study of a CCTV System of a Brazilian city.Iafet Leonardi Bricalli - 2019 - Foucault Studies 27 (27):143-160.
    This article aims at introducing the relation between the use of CCTV systems in urban spaces and social control. More specifically, its purpose is to problematize and reaffirm the use of the theoretical background of the panopticon in order to interpret such a relation. In CCTV studies, as a consequence of literal interpretations, as well as the existence of a hegemony in ethnographic studies carried out in control rooms, the theoretical use of the panopticon is then questioned. In (...)
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  39.  33
    Legislating being: The spectacle of words and things in Bentham's Panopticon.Andrew Zimmerman - 1998 - The European Legacy 3 (1):72-83.
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  40.  37
    Between the Carnival and the Panopticon, on Scott Bukatman's Matters of Gravity: Special Effects and Supermen in the 20th Century.Mary Helen Kolisnyk - 2005 - Film-Philosophy 9 (3).
    Scott Bukatman _Matters of Gravity: Special Effects and Supermen in the 20th Century_ Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press, 2003 ISBN 0-82323-3119-5 279 pp.
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  41.  16
    Crime and its Consequences Under the Panopticon, on Gareth Palmer Discipline and Liberty: Television and Governance.David Tucker - 2004 - Film-Philosophy 8 (2).
    Gareth Palmer _Discipline and Liberty: Television and Governance_ Manchester, England: Manchester University Press, 2003 ISBN 0719066921 204 pp.
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  42.  20
    Koolhaas' Revison of Foucault's Panopticon; or, How Architecture and Philosophy Just Met.Andre Patrao - 2020 - Architecture Philosophy 5 (1).
  43.  53
    Janet Semple, Bentham's Prison: A Study of the Panopticon Penitentiary, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1993, pp. 344.Judge Stephen Tumim - 1994 - Utilitas 6 (1):135.
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  44.  6
    “Make a Hard Push for It”: The Benthams, Foucault, and the Panopticons’ Roots in the Paris École Militaire.Haroldo A. Guízar - 2018 - Lumen: Selected Proceedings From the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 37:151.
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  45.  51
    “A row of screaming Russian dolls”: Escaping the Panopticon in David Mitchell’s number9dream.P. A. Harris & R. Harris-Birtill - 2015 - Substance 44 (1):55-70.
  46.  14
    Pain, Pleasure, and the Greater Good: From Panopticon to the Skinner Box and Beyond[REVIEW]Fenneke Sysling - 2018 - Isis 109 (4):818-819.
  47.  22
    Susan Lanzoni, Empathy: A History. New Haven, CT and London: Yale University Press, 2018. Pp. ix + 392. ISBN 978-0-3002-2268-5. $30.00 . - Cathy Gere, Pain, Pleasure, and the Greater Good: From the Panopticon to the Skinner Box and Beyond. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press, 2017. Pp. 282. ISBN 978-0-2265-0185-7. $30.00. [REVIEW]Rob Boddice - 2019 - British Journal for the History of Science 52 (3):534-535.
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  48. Janet Semple, "Bentham's Prison: A Study of the Panopticon Penitentiary". [REVIEW]Terence Ball - 1994 - History of Political Thought 15 (1):136.
  49.  11
    “Secrecy or Silence with Her Finger on Her Mouth”: Jeremy Bentham’s Other Model of Visibility and Power.Kristen R. Collins - 2022 - Political Theory 50 (4):596-620.
    To challenge the Foucauldian legacy of Jeremy Bentham’s panopticon prison, scholars often highlight Bentham’s later writings on the democratic power of public opinion. In doing so, they reaffirm Bentham’s reputation as a unreserved proponent of transparency. To recover the limits of Bentham’s embrace of publicity, I examine the model of visibility exemplified by his designs for the Sotimion, a residence for unmarried, pregnant women. The Sotimion draws our attention to Bentham’s appreciation for concealment as a method of preventing individual (...)
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  50. Torture Pornopticon: (In)security Cameras, Self-Governance and Autonomy.Steve Jones - 2015 - In Linnie Blake & Xavier Aldana Reyes (eds.), Digital Horror: Haunted Technologies, Network Panic and the Found Footage Phenomenon. I.B. Tauris. pp. 29-41.
    ‘Torture porn’ films centre on themes of abduction, imprisonment and suffering. Within the subgenre, protagonists are typically placed under relentless surveillance by their captors. CCTV features in more than 45 contemporary torture-themed films (including Captivity, Hunger, and Torture Room). Security cameras signify a bridging point between the captors’ ability to observe and to control their prey. Founded on power-imbalance, torture porn’s prison-spaces are panoptical. Despite failing to encapsulate contemporary surveillance’s complexities (see Haggerty, 2011), the panopticon remains a dominant paradigm (...)
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