Object Lessons is a series of short, beautifully designed books about the hidden lives of ordinary things.
From the theater mask and masquerade to the masked criminal and the rise of facial recognition software, masks have long performed as an instrument for the protection and concealment of identity.
Even as they conceal and protect, masks – as faces – are an extension of the self.
At the same time, they are a part of material culture: what are masks made of?
What traces do they leave behind?
Acknowledging that that mask-wearing has become increasingly weaponized and politicized, Sharrona Pearl looks at the politics of the mask, exploring how identity itself is read on this object.
By exploring who we do (and do not) seek to protect through different forms of masking, Sharrona Pearl’s long history of masks helps us to better understand what it is we value.
Object Lessons is published in partnership with an essay series in The Atlantic.
By:
Dr. Sharrona Pearl
Imprint: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Country of Publication: United States
Dimensions:
Height: 165mm,
Width: 121mm,
ISBN: 9798765102404
Series: Object Lessons
Pages: 136
Publication Date: 27 June 2024
Audience:
Professional and scholarly
,
Undergraduate
Format: Paperback
Publisher's Status: Active
Introduction 1. My Mask Rules, Often Broken 2. Physiognomy 3. Feature/Bug: Multivalence 4. History: Not of Socks 5. Performing as Protection 6. Freedom and Constraint: Whose Trust Matters 7. Medical Masks and the Covid Elephant 8. Violence and the Masks of War 9. No Way to Hide 10. Villain/Hero: V'Nahafoch Hu 11. Superheroes, or: Who Watches the Watchers 12. The Eyes Have It: Face Facemasks and Looking Like Ourselves 13. Exposure Acknowledgments Bibliography Index
Sharrona Pearl is Associate Professor of Bioethics and History in the Health Care Administration Department at Drexel University, USA. She is the author of Do I Know You? From Face Blindness to Super Recognition (2023), Face/On: Face Transplants and the Ethics of the Other (2017), and About Faces: Physiognomy in Nineteenth-Century Britain (2010). Her writing has appeared in Public Books, Lilith Magazine, The Revealer, and The Washington Post, among others.
Reviews for Mask
Masking is, as Sharrona Pearl wisely observes, a complicated enterprise: masks can protect and buffer even as they diminish, eviscerate, and lie. With a historian's rigor and a human's candor, Pearl addresses all of this and more. From public health to performance and ritual, Mask interrogates the personal, public, and inevitably paradoxical ways we both conceal and reveal our increasingly imperiled selves. * Jessica Helfand, author of Face: A Visual Odyssey (2019) *