{ thoughts on a world of chance from David G. Schwartz }

Surveillance and Dickens

September 25th, 2007 by Dave

If you are in Reno on Monday, October 1 at 4 pm, I really urge you to stop by Schulich Lecture Hall on UNR’s campus for what promises to be a great talk by Aaron Santesso, a UNR English professor. The lecture is presented by the Core Humanities Program and is called

“Dickens in the Casino: Surveillance, Empiricism, and the Novel.” Here’s a description:
Casino surveillance and the Victorian novel seem like odd bedfellows — and yet one might say that every surveillance agent is a Dickens fan at heart. This lecture will look at modern casino surveillance as a system which attempts to make the individual instantly knowable, and will trace the history of parallel attempted systems in eighteenth and nineteenth-century literature, philosophy and science.

Lecture flyer (pdf)

I’ve talked with Professor Santesso about his ideas, and I think the lecture is going to be brilliant. He’s asking and answering questions that aren’t immediately obvious, but make perfect sense. If you’re in Reno on Monday, you should see this.

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David G. Schwartz

the die is cast

is the online home of David G. Schwartz, who writes extensively about Las Vegas, gambling, and history.

He's the Director of the Center for Gaming Research at UNLV and has a Ph.D. in United States history from UCLA. He's also taught a range of subjects, running the gamut from hospitality security to gambling history to writing creative non-fiction.

You can learn more about him on the about page.