I didn't want to get into too much of a post-modernist reading.
Foucault's conception of the panoptical prison, which is an idea that was conceived by Bentham in the 19th century, sort of extends to how social behavior is policed at large in our society. Social taboos get policed often not by law, but from a fear of being seen by some unknown disapproving gaze.
In the novel Breach seems like something corporeal, but at the same time the fear of being observed breaking the conventions of the world they live in draws parallels to the way many people fear being unconventional or breaking social taboos for fear of what unknown strangers will think.
At the same time I thought of how in the History of Sexuality, Foucault discusses what he terms the "repressive hypothesis" of policing sexual behavior. He argues that instead of legal institutions being the source of repression, it is rather the dialogue and discourse around sexual deviance that creates the categories that need to be policed. So, he says people talking about taboos, or engaging in them in secret, are not really being subversive but are contributing to the construction of the conceptions of those taboos. Much like the way the unificationist seem to reinforce the split merely by their focus on it, and how the detectives constant self-assurances that everyone breaks the unseeing rules occasionally help to contribute to his constant tendency to reinforce the rules by repeating them to himself.




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"He had but one eye, and the popular prejudice runs in favour of two."