Photography and Jewish History

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A01=Amos Morris-Reich
Albert Kahn
An-Sky
Author_Amos Morris-Reich
British Palestine
Category=AJ
Category=JBSR
Category=NHTB
documentary
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
essentialist
Eugen Fischer
Helmar Lerski
holocaust
Jewish identity and photography
Judaism
representation
Robert Frank
Russian Jewry
scientific racism
Solomon Yudovin
theory
twentieth century
Utopia
Vilem Flusser
Zionism

Product details

  • ISBN 9780812253917
  • Dimensions: 178 x 254mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Nov 2022
  • Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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It is a sign of the accepted evidentiary status of photographs that historians regularly append them to their accounts, Amos Morris-Reich observes. Very often, however, these photographs are treated as mere illustrations, simple documentations of the events that transpired. Scholars of photography, on the other hand, tend to prioritize the photographs themselves, relegating the historical contexts to the background. For Morris-Reich, however, photography exists within reality; it partakes in and is very much a component of the history it records. Morris-Reich examines how photography affects categories of history and experience, how it is influenced by them, and the ways in which our understanding of the relationship between history and photography can be theorized and reoriented.
Morris-Reich here turns to five twentieth-century cases in which photography and Jewish history intersect: Albert Kahn’s utopian attempt to establish a photographic archive in Paris in order to advance world peace; the spectacular failed project of Helmar Lerski, the most prominent photographer in British Mandate Jewish Palestine; photography in the long career of Eugen Fischer, a Nazi professor of genetics; the street photography of Robert Frank; and the first attempt to introduce photography into the study of Russian Jewry prior to World War I, as seen from the post-Holocaust perspective of the early twenty-first century. Illustrated with nearly 100 images, Photography and Jewish History moves beyond a focus on Jewish photographers or the photographic representation of Jews or Jewish visibility to plumb the deeper and more significant registers of twentieth-century Jewish political history.

Amos Morris-Reich is Director of the Stephen Roth Institute for the Study of Contemporary Antisemitism and Racism and Professor at the Cohn Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science and Ideas at Tel Aviv University.

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