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Photography and its Critics: A Cultural History, 1839-1900


Photography and its Critics: A Cultural History, 1839-1900

Paperback by Marien, Mary Warner (Syracuse University, New York)

Photography and its Critics: A Cultural History, 1839-1900

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ISBN:
9781107403383
Publication Date:
15 Sep 2011
Language:
English
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Pages:
242 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 14 - 19 May 2024
Photography and its Critics: A Cultural History, 1839-1900

Description

First published in 1997, Photography and its Critics offers an overview of nineteenth-century American and European writing about photography from such disparate fields as art theory, social reform, and physiology. The earliest criticism of the invention was informed by an ample legacy of notions about objectivity, appearances, and copying. Received ideas about neutral vision, intuitive genius, and progress in art also shaped nineteenth-century understanding of photography. In this study, Mary Warner Marien argues that photography was an important social and cultural symbol for modernity and change in several fields, such as art and social reform. Moreover, she demonstrates how photography quickly emerged as a pliant symbol for modernity and change, one that could as easily oppose progress as promote democracy.

Contents

1. The origins of photographic discourse; 2. Photography and the modern in nineteenth-century thought; 3. Art, photography and society; 4. Forced to be free: photography, literacy, and mass culture; 5. The lure of modernity; Epilogue: ghosts: photography and the modern; Bibliographic survey.

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