Suspect Subjects: Affects of Bodily Regulation
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Henne, Kathryn
Troshynski, Emily
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Crime and Justice Research Centre, School of Justice, Faculty of Law, Queensland University of Technology
Abstract
There is a growing body of academic literature that scrutinises the effects of technologies deployed to surveil the physical bodies of citizens. This paper considers the role of affect; that is, the visceral and emotive forces underpinning conscious forms of knowing that can drive one�s thoughts, feelings and movements. Drawing from research on two distinctly different groups of surveilled subjects � paroled sex offenders and elite athletes � it examines the effects of biosurveillance in their lives and how their reflections reveal unique insight into how subjectivity, citizenship, harm and deviance become constructed in intimate and public ways vis-�-vis technologies of bodily regulation. Specifically, we argue, their narratives reveal cultural conditions of biosurveillance, particularly how risk becomes embodied and internalised in subjective ways.
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International Journal of Crime, Justice and Social Democracy
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Open Access
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