Your ID, please? the Henry Gates vs. James Crowley event from an anthropological perspective

In the modern world, ID papers are those indispensable objects without which we cannot prove we are who we say we are. We need material proof to attest to our identification. The central ethnographic event of this paper took place in July 2009 with the arrest of Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr. by t...

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Bibliographic Details
Author: Peirano,Mariza
Format: article
Status:Published version
Publication Date:2011
Country:Brasil
Institution:Associação Brasileira de Antropologia
Repository:Vibrant
Language:English
OAI Identifier:oai:scielo:S1809-43412011000200003
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1809-43412011000200003
Access Level:Open access
Keyword:ID papers
ethnography
Henry Louis Gates
Valentin Groebner
Charles S. Peirce
Description
Summary:In the modern world, ID papers are those indispensable objects without which we cannot prove we are who we say we are. We need material proof to attest to our identification. The central ethnographic event of this paper took place in July 2009 with the arrest of Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr. by the police of the city of Cambridge, Massachusetts, after a passer-by reported that someone was breaking of the entrance door of a house which, it soon transpired, was the professor's own house. From the analysis of this episode three mechanisms of classification and singularization are revealed, namely "recognition," "identification," and "profiling."