Reviews
The book serves as a clinical yet compelling breakdown...Do I Know You? may be most compelling to the face blind and super recognizers (or their loved ones), Pearl adeptly broadens the lens with interesting tidbits, demonstrating what our collective obsession with knowing faces means for us as a society, for good and for ill, especially in our digital era.
A rigorous history of science and technology, a brilliant theoretical exploration of "spectrum thinking," a good read, and – not least – a people's history of having (to recognize) a face. "Naming helps," Pearl shows, "to a point." This book helps mark that point. Sharrona Pearl reads face recognition like a boss.
This book is fascinating, its ideas are stimulating, and Pearl's originality is indisputable. The writing is clear, engaging, and renders the technical aspects of face blindness with the clarity all history of science should strive for.
The face—remembering, recognizing, categorizing—is a central site for human relation. Dr. Sharrona Pearl's Do I Know You? is a deeply original, beautifully told history about how we do and don't recognize faces. Pearl offers a wonderful history of science book that will be a resource for readers for years to come
In this highly engaging and wide-ranging inquiry, Pearl explores how faces and our differential abilities to recognize them are valued, pathologized, instrumentalized, capitalized, and organized. At a time when facial recognition technologies are urgently stirring up hopes and fears for surveillance society, this book offers a longer durée meditation on the value we place in faces and the many forms of work a diagnosis can do.
Book Details
Acknowledgments
Introduction. Inventing a Spectrum
Chapter 1. Thinking in Cases: A Somewhat Failed Search for Origins
Chapter 2. The Blindness of Great Men; or, How Prosopagnosia Was Invented
Chapter 3
Acknowledgments
Introduction. Inventing a Spectrum
Chapter 1. Thinking in Cases: A Somewhat Failed Search for Origins
Chapter 2. The Blindness of Great Men; or, How Prosopagnosia Was Invented
Chapter 3. More Men, More Invention: The Other Side of the Spectrum (and Two Sides of the Same Story)
Chapter 4. A Super Useless Super Skill: Meet the Supers
Chapter 5. Face Surveillance at the Border: Checkpoint Charlie
Chapter 6. Face Recognition Software and Machine Translation: Why Computers Aren't People
Chapter 7. Is There Dyslexia without Reading?
Conclusion. Beyond the Face
Coda. The Detective Story
Notes
Index