Iconic Materiality, or the Ambivalent Fascination of Cinematic Lie Detection Depictions (in Germany)
- Bettina Paul (author)
- Larissa Fischer (author)
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Title | Iconic Materiality, or the Ambivalent Fascination of Cinematic Lie Detection Depictions (in Germany) |
---|---|
Contributor | Bettina Paul (author) |
Larissa Fischer (author) | |
License | https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ |
Copyright | Bettina Paul and Larissa Fischer |
Publisher | meson press |
Published on | 2024-05-22 |
Page range | pp. 147–163 |
Language | English (Original) |
Bettina Paul
(author)Bettina Paul is a senior researcher and lecturer in Criminology at the Department of Social Science at Hamburg University. Her current research is inspired by the intersection of science and technology and cultural animal studies. It centres around interspecies awareness, multispecies knowledge production, sociotechnical imaginations, and the polychronicity of technologies as in the case of truth technologies.
Larissa Fischer
(author)Larissa Fischer is a PhD candidate and research fellow at the Institute of Sociology at the RWTH Aachen University. She currently works on the project “Sociotechnical Systems of Anticipatory Truth Verification in the Field of Airport Security,” funded by the German Research Foundation. Her research interests include cultural sociology, qualitative methods, science and technology studies, visual culture, and science fiction