Kehon kirjaaminen – Suomen passin historiaa: Näyttely

Translated title of the contribution: Inscribing the body: A history of the Finnish Passport

Asko Lehmuskallio (Producer), Paula Haara (Producer), Tiina Rauhala (Producer), Anna Björklund (Producer), Max Fritze (Producer)

Research output: Artistic and non-textual formExhibitionArt in coproduction

Abstract

The passport can fulfill its function of opening doors only if the human body is linked to it in a reliable way. As identification methods have evolved and control increased, the body's relationship to the passport has been in a constant state of flux.

In the 19th century, the holder's name was sometimes the only identifying information printed in the passport. The photograph became an important identification tool when a relatively free-form photograph was included in the passport at the beginning of the 20th century. The photograph complemented the description of the holder's physical appearance, which in the early days was how the body was documented on a passport.

It was not until after World War II that the passport photograph evolved into a type of its own, with origins in forensics and anthropometry. Biometric identification has become more precise over time and is now increasingly carried out by machines.

The passport is still both an identification document and a recommendation letter, but the question of who may be granted a passport is politically charged. At border control, not all recommendations are treated as equal and some documents are scrutinized more thoroughly than others.

The passport, in fact, reveals something about the entities issuing it: who is deemed trustworthy and on what grounds, and what data is chosen to support this. Its history reveals how a person’s right to travel has been assessed through time: Has trust been placed in the passenger's word, appearance or the data in a document, and has the reliable assessor taken the form of another person or a partially automated computer?
Translated title of the contributionInscribing the body: A history of the Finnish Passport
Original languageFinnish
Place of PublicationHelsinki
PublisherFinnish Museum of Photography
Publication statusPublished - 2020
Publication typeF2 Public partial realisation of a work of art

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