Photography Theory

Regular price €47.99
Analog Photography
art
Art Seminar
baetens
Barthes's Idea
Barthes’s Idea
Baudelaire
camera
Camera Lucida
Category=AB
digital
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
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Exposure Time
Follow
Geoffrey
Geoffrey
Gum Print
Held
history
jan
Jan Baetens
je
Jeff
Jeff Wall
Jeff
Light Sensitive Surface
lucida
MIT Press
Performative Photography
Photograph's Punctum
Photographic Image
Photographic Message
Photograph’s Punctum
Roland Barthes's Camera Lucida
Roland Barthes’s Camera Lucida
Roundtable Conversation
Roundtable Discussion
seminar
Side Scan Sonar
Talbot
University College Cork
wall

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415977838
  • Weight: 900g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Dec 2006
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Photography Theory presents forty of the world's most active art historians and theorists, including Victor Burgin, Joel Snyder, Rosalind Krauss, Alan Trachtenberg, Geoffrey Batchen, Carol Squiers, Margaret Iversen and Abigail Solomon-Godeau in animated debate on the nature of photography.

Photography has been around for nearly two centuries, but we are no closer to understanding what it is. For some people, a photograph is an optically accurate impression of the world, for others, it is mainly a way of remembering people and places. Some view it as a sign of bourgeois life, a kind of addiction of the middle class, whilst others see it as a troublesome interloper that has confused people's ideas of reality and fine art to the point that they have difficulty even defining what a photograph is. For some, the whole question of finding photography's nature is itself misguided from the beginning.

This provocative second volume in the Routledge The Art Seminar series presents not one but many answers to the question what makes a photograph a photograph?

James Elkins is E.C. Chadbourne Chair in the Department of Art History, Theory, and Criticism at the Art Institute of Chicago, and Head of History of Art at the University College Cork, Ireland. He is author of Pictures andTears, How to Use Your Eyes, and What Painting Is, and, most recently, The Strange Place of Religion inContemporary Art and Master Narratives and TheirDiscontents, all published by Routledge.