panopticon

English

Schematic diagram of a panopticon as proposed in Jeremy Bentham's 1787 publication)

Etymology

From Ancient Greek πᾶν (pân, all) + ὀπτικός (optikós, visible). Coined by English philosopher Jeremy Bentham in 1787.

Noun

panopticon (plural panopticons)

  1. A type of prison where all the cells are visible from the center, particularly if it is not possible for those in a cell to know if they are being watched.
    • 1787 Jeremy Bentham: Panopticon: or, the inspection-house.
      Panopticon: or, the inspection-house. Containing the idea of a new principle of construction applicable to any sort of establishment, in which Persons of any Description are to be kept under inspection. And in particular to: penitentiary-houses, poor-houses, prisons, manufactories, houses of industry, mad-houses, work-houses, hospitals, and schools. . .
      Now as to safe custody. Upon the Panopticon plan at least, absolute solitude is equally unnecessary to this purpose. Towards effecting an escape, what can two or three do more than one, confined as they are by iron grates while they are within the prison, and by walls when they are without? and in either case, never out of the eye of an inspector, who is armed and out of reach of attack, and within reach of whatever assistance he can desire? . . .
      I look upon escape out of a Panopticon, I have said so over and over, as an event morally impossible. But suppose it otherwise how great the additional security which an expedient thus simple would afford!
    • 2022, Liam McIlvanney, The Heretic, page 274:
      He was alive to every creak and dunt, the thinness of the walls, as if the tenement block was a kind of aural panopticon that funnelled every sound to the other residents, let everyone eavesdrop on their business.
  2. (figurative, by extension) A place in which people are subject to constant surveillance at totalitarian command.
    • 2013, Maryland v. King (U.S. Supreme Court No. 12–207), Justice Scalia dissenting:
      Perhaps the construction of such a genetic panopticon is wise. But I doubt that the proud men who wrote the charter of our liberties would have been so eager to open their mouths for royal inspection.
  3. A room for the exhibition of novelties.

Quotations

  • For quotations using this term, see Citations:panopticon.

Translations

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