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Seven theses on photography

Thesis Eleven 113 (1):141-156 (2012)

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  1. Mythologies.Roland Barthes & Annette Lavers - 1973 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 31 (4):563-564.
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  • Noise... The Political Economy of Music.Dana Polan, Jacques Attali & Brian Massumi - 1988 - Substance 17 (3):56.
  • Dissemination.Betty R. McGraw, Jacques Derrida & Barbara Johnson - 1983 - Substance 12 (2):114.
  • We have never been modern.Bruno Latour - 1993 - Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
    A summation of the work of one of the most influential and provocative interpreters of science, it aims at saving what is good and valuable in modernity and ...
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  • The Coming of Photography in India.Christopher Pinney - 2008 - British Library.
    Though photography reaches as far back as the sixteenth-century’s camera obscura projects, it wasn’t until the British colonial period that amateur photographers introduced their technology to the Indian subcontinent. By the end of the nineteenth century, however, India was at the center of a representational revolution. Was photography in India simply a void, waiting to be filled by pre-existing cultural and historical practice? Or was it disruptive, throwing up new opportunities, prophesying new social formations, and bringing anxieties about formerly secluded (...)
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  • Burden of Representation: Essays on Photographies and Histories.John Tagg - 1988 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    Photographs are used as documents, evidence, and records every day in courtrooms, hospitals, and police work, on passports, permits, and licenses. But how did such usages come to be established and accepted, and when? What kinds of photographs were seen seen as purely instrumental and able to function in this way? What sorts of agencies and institutions had the power to give them this status? And more generally, what conception of photographic representation did this involve, and what were its consequences?
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  • Camera Indica: The Social Life of Indian Photographs.Christopher Pinney - 1997 - University of Chicago Press.
    These quiet but moving images represent the changing role of photographic portraiture in India, a topic anthropologist Christopher Pinney explores in Camera Indica.
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  • The Civil Contract of Photography.Ariella Azoulay - 2008 - Zone Books.
    An argument that anyone can pursue political agency and resistance through photography, even those with flawed or nonexistent citizenship.
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  • Camera Lucida : reflections on photography.Roland Barthes - 1981 - In Christopher Want (ed.), Philosophers on Art From Kant to the Postmodernists: A Critical Reader. Columbia University Press.