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Who are you? And how can you prove it? How were individuals described and identified by people who had never seen them before, in the centuries before photography and fingerprinting, in a world without centralized administrations, where names and addresses were constantly changing? In Who Are You? Valentin Groeber traces the early modern European history of identification practices and identity papers. The documents, seals. stamps, and signatures were – and are – powerful tools that created the double of a person in writ and bore the indelible signs of bureaucratic authenticity. Ultimately, as Groeber lucidly explains, they revealed as much about their makers’ illusory fantasies as they did about their bearers’ actual identity.
The bureaucratic desire to register and control the population created, from the sixteenth century onward, an intricate administrative system for tracking individual identities. Most importantly, the proof of one’s identity was intimately linked and determined by the identification papers the authorities demanded and endlessly supplied. At the same time, these papers and practices ironically gave birth to two uncanny doppelgangers of administrative identity procedures: the spy who craftily forged official documents and passports and the imposter who dissimulated and mimed any individual he so desired. Through careful research and powerful narrative, Groebner recounts the complicated and bizarre stories of the many ways in which identities were stolen, created and doubled. Groebner argues that identity papers cannot be interpreted literally as pure and simple documents. They are themselves pieces of history, histories of individuals and individuality, papers that both documented and transformed their owners’ identity – from Renaissance vagrants and gypsies to the illegal immigrants of today who remain “sans papiers,” without papers.
Valentin Groebner is professor of medieval and Renaissance history at the University of Lucerne. He is the author of Defaced: The Visual Culture of Violence in the Late Middle Ages and Liquid Assets, Dangerous Gifts: Presents and Politics at the End of the Middle Ages.
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