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==To prevent recognition==
==To prevent recognition==
[[Image:Doctor-0001.jpg|thumbnail|250px|left|Identity mask.]]
* Criminals often use masks to avoid [[Recognition of human individuals|recognition]] when committing [[crime]]s. In many jurisdictions, it is an additional criminal offense to wear a mask while committing a crime; it is also often a crime to wear a mask at public [[assembly|assemblies]] and [[Demonstration (people)|demonstrations]].
* Criminals often use masks to avoid [[Recognition of human individuals|recognition]] when committing [[crime]]s. In many jurisdictions, it is an additional criminal offense to wear a mask while committing a crime; it is also often a crime to wear a mask at public [[assembly|assemblies]] and [[Demonstration (people)|demonstrations]].
* Occasionally a [[witness]] for the [[prosecution]] appears in [[court]] in a mask to avoid being recognized by associates of the [[accused]].
* Occasionally a [[witness]] for the [[prosecution]] appears in [[court]] in a mask to avoid being recognized by associates of the [[accused]].

Revision as of 23:26, 5 September 2006

A mask is a piece of material or kit worn on the face. Masks have been used since antiquity for both ceremonial and practical purposes.

The word mask came via French masque and either Italian maschera or Spanish máscara. Possible ancestors are Latin (not classical) mascus, masca = "ghost", and Arabic maskharah = "jester", "man in masquerade".

The 5000-year-old Mask of Warka is believed to be the oldest surviving mask. [1]

Ceremonial uses

Masks in a Guatemalan Market.
File:Masks iran ancient.jpg
Golden masks. Excavated in Kalmakareh, Luristan, Iran. First half of first Millennium BC. National Museum of Iran.
  • In ritual, social and religious functions, where participants wear them to represent spiritual or legendary figures. In some cultures it is also believed that the wearing of a mask will allow the wearer to take on the attributes of that mask's representation; i.e., a leopard-mask will induce the wearer to become leopard-like.
  • In Mexico and Central America, most towns have both a Christian name and an indigenous name, for example, Santiago Tianguistenco, or Santa Maria Axixitla. All Christian saints have a specific day in the year dedicated to them, and each town typically has a festival on that day, involving a combination of Christian and indigenous tradition. These festivals frequently include parades and street theatre that act out a story. The masks and costumes from these festivals have become collectors items. A mask used in such a festival is known as having been "danzada" or "danced." These hand-made, painted masks are typically made from wood and may use rope, animal horns or teeth, or rubber from tire inner tubes.
  • In Africa, specifically West Africa, masks play an important role in traditional ceremonies and theatrical dances. All African masks fall into one of four categories: the ancestor spirit, the mythological hero, the combination of ancestor and hero, and the animal spirit.

To prevent recognition

Identity mask.

Protective

A softball catcher wearing a mask for protection.

Protective masks have these functions:

  • Providing a supply of breathable air or other oxygen-containing gas.
  • Protecting the face against flying objects or dangerous environments, while allowing vision.

Many masks have both functions.
This category merges into the categories of goggles and protective helmets and visors.
Here are included:

Of masks that supply breathable air, some also cover the eyes (full-face); and some only cover the mouth and nose, and the wearer must also wear goggles.

Punitive

  • A "shameful" mask (Schandmaske in German) is devised for public humiliation; a popular reduced form are donkey ears for a bad ('dumb') pupil or student
  • Particularly uncomfortable types, such as an iron mask, are fit as devices for torture or corporal punishment
  • Masks were used to alienate and silence prisoners in Australian gaols in the late 19th century. They were made of white cloth and covered the face, leaving only the eyes visible.

Other types

  • A "life mask" is a plaster cast of a face, used as a model for making a painting or sculpture.
  • A "death mask" is the same but taken from the face of a recently dead person. Death masks were very popular in the Western World during the 18th and 19th century. Both life and death masks can preserve an accurate 3D representation of a face.
  • A facial (short for facial mask) is a temporary mask, not solid, used in cosmetics or therapy for skin treatment.

See also