Description

Book Synopsis

Hershberger is the winner of a 2015 Insight Award from the Society for Photographic Education for his work on this book and for his overall contributions to the field!

Photographic Theory: An Historical Anthology presents a compendium of readings spanning ancient times to the digital age that are related to the history, nature, and current status of debates in photographic theory.

  • Offers an authoritative and academically up-to-date compendium of the history of photographic theory
  • Represents the only collection to include ancient, Renaissance, and 19th-, 20th-, and 21st-century writings related to the subject
  • Stresses the drama of historical and contemporary debates within theoretical circles
  • Features comprehensive coverage of recent trends in digital photography
  • Fills a much-needed gap in the existing literature


Trade Review

"There can be no question that those of us who teach the history of photography – and our students – have been put most deeply in Hershberger’s debt." (History of Photography Online, 1 June 2015)

"This chronologically (and, to a lesser extent, thematically) organized selection of key contributions to photographic theory display both the highly exciting diversity of theoretical questions raised by the emergence, development, triumph, and eventual metamorphosis of photography and the amazing possibility to organize the sometimes savage heterogenity of this material along unobtrusive and simple art-historical lines." - Leonardo Online (1 February 2014)



Table of Contents

Introduction 1

1 Before Photography to Invention: c. 380 B.C.E.–1839 9

Camera/Vision 11

1.1 Excerpts from the Allegory of the Cave. In The Republic 12
Plato, c. 380 B.C.E.

1.2 The Function of the Eye, As Explained by the Camera Obscura 17
Leonardo da Vinci, c. 1520

1.3 Description of the Camera Lucida 19
William H. Wollaston, 1807

Art/History 23

1.4 Excerpts on Linear Perspective. In On Painting 24
Leon Battista Alberti, 1540

1.5 Account of the late Mr. [Robert] Barker 29
Anonymous, 1806

1.6 Description of the Process of Painting and Effects of Light Invented by Daguerre, and Applied by Him to the Pictures of the Diorama 31
Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre, 1839

2 Invention to Pictorialism: 1839–c. 1880 35

What is Photography? 37

2.1 Some Account of the Art of Photogenic Drawing 38
William Henry Fox Talbot, 1839 [March]

2.2 The Pencil of Nature. A New Discovery 44
Nathaniel Parker Willis and Timothy O. Porter, eds., 1839 [April]

2.3 Report [on the Daguerreotype to the Chamber of Deputies] 48
François Arago, 1839 [July]

Art/History 55

2.4 Upon Photography in an Artistic View, and in Its Relations to the Arts 56
Sir William J. Newton, 1853

2.5 La Photographie 59
Antoine Joseph Wiertz, 1855

2.6 Photography 61
Eastlake, Lady (Elizabeth) 1857

Camera/Vision 67

2.7 The Stereoscope and the Stereograph 68
Oliver Wendell Holmes, 1859

2.8 Combination Printing. In Pictorial Effect in Photography 72
Henry Peach Robinson, 1869

2.9 Annals of My Glass House 76
Julia Margaret Cameron, 1874

3 Pictorialism to/and/vs. Modernism: c. 1880–c. 1920 81

Camera/Vision 83

3.1 Focussing. In Naturalistic Photography for Students of the Art 84
Peter Henry Emerson, 1890

3.2 The Death of Naturalistic Photography 88
Peter Henry Emerson, 1890

3.3 The Hand Camera — Its Present Importance 91
Alfred Stieglitz, 1896

Interdisciplinary Approaches 95

3.4 Photo-Chemical Investigations and a New Method of Determination of the Sensitiveness of Photographic Plates 96
Ferdinand Hurter and Vero C. Driffield, 1890

3.5 Logic as Semiotic: The Theory of Signs 100
Charles Sanders Peirce, c. 1900

3.6 Intuition and Art. In Æsthetic: As Science of Expression and General Linguistic 105
Benedetto Croce, 1902

3.7 The Cinematographical Mechanism of Thought and the Mechanistic Illusion…. In Creative Evolution 108
Henri Bergson, 1907

What Should Photographs Look Like? 113

3.8 On the Straight Print 114
Robert Demachy, 1907

3.9 What is a “Straight Print”? 118
Frederick H. Evans, 1907

3.10 Photography and Artistic-Photography 121
Marius de Zayas, 1913

4 Modernism to Postmodernism: c. 1920–c. 1960 123

Camera/Vision 125

4.1 Photography and the New God 126
Paul Strand, 1922

4.2 Light: A Medium of Plastic Expression 130
László Moholy-Nagy, 1923

4.3 Seeing Photographically 132
Edward Weston, 1943

4.4 The Camera’s Glass Eye 136
Clement Greenberg, 1946

What Should Photographs Look Like? 139

4.5 Aims 140
Albert Renger-Patzsch, 1927

4.6 A Personal Credo 142
Ansel Adams, 1943

4.7 Our Illustrations 147
Frank R. Fraprie, 1943

4.8 Photography at the Crossroads 150
Berenice Abbott, 1951

Art/History 155

4.9 Excerpts from Perspective as Symbolic Form 156
Erwin Panofsky, 1927

4.10 The Age of the World Picture 161
Martin Heidegger, 1938/52

4.11 Excerpts from Museum Without Walls 164
André Malraux, 1947

Interdisciplinary Approaches 169

4.12 Photography and Typography 170
Jan Tschichold, 1928

4.13 The Making of a Film. In Film as Art 174
Rudolph Arnheim, 1932

4.14 The Ontology of the Photographic Image. In What Is Cinema? 176
André Bazin, 1945

What is Photography? 181

4.15 Mechanism and Expression, the Essence and Value of Photography 182
Franz Roh, 1929

4.16 Introduction to The Decisive Moment 188
Henri Cartier-Bresson, 1952

4.17 Photography 192
Siegfried Kracauer, 1960

5 Modernism and Postmodernism to Digital Imaging: c. 1960–c. 1990 199

Art/History 201

5.1 Equivalence: The Perennial Trend 202
Minor White, 1963

5.2 Perspective. In Languages of Art 207
Nelson Goodman, 1968

5.3 Can There Ever Again Be a History of Photography? 211
Peter C. Bunnell, 1975

5.4 Introduction to Before Photography: Painting and the Invention of Photography 214
Peter Galassi, 1981

5.5 New Metaphorics: Spirit and Symbol in Contemporary Landscape Photography 219
Gretchen Garner, 1988

Camera/Vision 225

5.6 Introduction to The Photographer’s Eye 226
John Szarkowski, 1966

5.7 Post-Visualization 232
Jerry Uelsmann, 1967

5.8 Introduction to New Topographics 235
William Jenkins, 1975

Interdisciplinary Approaches 239

5.9 Excerpts from The World Viewed 240
Stanley Cavell, 1971

5.10 Notes on the Index: Seventies Art in America 246
Rosalind Krauss, 1977

5.11 Photography and Fetish 251
Christian Metz, 1985

5.12 Film, Photography, and Fetish: The Analyses of Christian Metz 256
Ben Singer, 1988

What is Photography? 263

5.13 On the Nature of Photography 264
Rudolf Arnheim, 1974

5.14 Photography, Vision, and Representation 269
Joel Snyder and Neil Walsh Allen, 1975

5.15 The Directorial Mode: Notes Toward a Definition 276
A. D. Coleman, 1976

5.16 Selections from Transparent Pictures: On the Nature of Photographic Realism 284
Kendall L.Walton, 1984

5.17 The Photograph as Post-Industrial Object: An Essay on the Ontological Standing of Photographs 290
Vilém Flusser, 1986

Identity/Politics 295

5.18 The Traffic in Photographs 296
Allan Sekula, 1981

5.19 Of Mother Nature and Marlboro Men: An Inquiry into the Cultural Meanings of Landscape Photography 302
Deborah Bright, 1985

5.20 Excerpts from Right of Inspection 310
Jacques Derrida, 1985

5.21 Fetal Images: The Power of Visual Culture in the Politics of Reproduction 315
Rosalind Pollack Petchesky, 1987

6 Postmodernism and Digital Imaging (Return to Pictorialism?): c. 1990–c. 2010 319

What is Digital Photography? 321

6.1 The Transcendental Machine? A Comparison of Digital Photography and Nineteenth-Century Modes of Photographic Representation 322
Diana Emery Hulick, 1990

6.2 Photojournalism in the Age of Computers 329
Fred Ritchin, 1990

6.3 Phantasm: Digital Imaging and the Death of Photography. In Metamorphoses 334
Geoffrey Batchen, 1994

6.4 Escaping Reality: Digital Imagery and the Resources of Photography 338
Barbara E. Savedoff, 1997

6.5 Fixing the Art of Digital Photography: Electronic Shadows 344
Ellen Handy, 1998

6.6 Digital Ontologies: The Ideality of Form in/and Code Storage — or — Can Graphesis Challenge Mathesis? 350
Johanna Drucker, 2001

Identity/Politics 355

6.7 Do Not Doubt the Dangerousness of the 12-Inch-Tall Politician 356
David Wojnarowicz, 1991

6.8 The Politics of Focus: Feminism and Photography Theory 359
Lindsay Smith, 1992

6.9 Re-Picturing Photography: A Language in the Making 365
Aphrodite Désirée Navab, 2001

6.10 A Painful Labour: Responsibility and Photography 370
Sharon Sliwinski, 2004

Camera/Vision 377

6.11 Clement Greenberg and Walker Evans: Transparency and Transcendence 378
Mike Weaver, 1991

6.12 The Shadows on the Wall. In The Reconfigured Eye: Visual Truth in the Post-Photographic Era 382
William J. Mitchell, 1992

6.13 Of Fish, Birds, Cats, Mice, Spiders, Flies, Pigs, and Chimpanzees: How Chance Casts the Historic Action Photograph into Doubt 384
Robin Kelsey, 2009

Art/History 389

6.14 The Invisible Dragon: On Beauty I 390
Dave Hickey, 1991

6.15 The Idiom in Photography as the Truth in Painting 394
Rosemary Hawker, 2002

6.16 “Impressed by Nature’s Hand”: Photography and Authorship 399
Douglas R. Nickel, 2009

Photography and Memory 407

6.17 Surviving Images: Holocaust Photographs and the Work of Postmemory 408
Marianne Hirsch, 2001

6.18 Visualizing Memory: Photographs and the Art of Biography 412
Deborah Willis, 2003

6.19 Remembering September 11: Photography as Cultural Diplomacy 415
Liam Kennedy, 2003

6.20 Through a Glass, Darkly: Photography and Cultural Memory 421
Alan Trachtenberg, 2008

Interdisciplinary Approaches 425

6.21 Curiosity and Conjecture: Mathematics, Photography, and the Imagination 426
David Travis, 2003

6.22 Image as Trace: Speculations about an Undead Paradigm 429
Peter Geimer, 2007

6.23 The Photographic Argument of Philosophy 436
Alexander Sekatskiy, 2010

Works Cited and Further Reading 440

Credits, Sources, and Acknowledgments 449

Acknowledgments 454

Index 456

Photographic Theory

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    A Hardback by Andrew E. Hershberger

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      View other formats and editions of Photographic Theory by Andrew E. Hershberger

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 06/12/2013
      ISBN13: 9781405198462, 978-1405198462
      ISBN10: 140519846X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Hershberger is the winner of a 2015 Insight Award from the Society for Photographic Education for his work on this book and for his overall contributions to the field!

      Photographic Theory: An Historical Anthology presents a compendium of readings spanning ancient times to the digital age that are related to the history, nature, and current status of debates in photographic theory.

      • Offers an authoritative and academically up-to-date compendium of the history of photographic theory
      • Represents the only collection to include ancient, Renaissance, and 19th-, 20th-, and 21st-century writings related to the subject
      • Stresses the drama of historical and contemporary debates within theoretical circles
      • Features comprehensive coverage of recent trends in digital photography
      • Fills a much-needed gap in the existing literature


      Trade Review

      "There can be no question that those of us who teach the history of photography – and our students – have been put most deeply in Hershberger’s debt." (History of Photography Online, 1 June 2015)

      "This chronologically (and, to a lesser extent, thematically) organized selection of key contributions to photographic theory display both the highly exciting diversity of theoretical questions raised by the emergence, development, triumph, and eventual metamorphosis of photography and the amazing possibility to organize the sometimes savage heterogenity of this material along unobtrusive and simple art-historical lines." - Leonardo Online (1 February 2014)



      Table of Contents

      Introduction 1

      1 Before Photography to Invention: c. 380 B.C.E.–1839 9

      Camera/Vision 11

      1.1 Excerpts from the Allegory of the Cave. In The Republic 12
      Plato, c. 380 B.C.E.

      1.2 The Function of the Eye, As Explained by the Camera Obscura 17
      Leonardo da Vinci, c. 1520

      1.3 Description of the Camera Lucida 19
      William H. Wollaston, 1807

      Art/History 23

      1.4 Excerpts on Linear Perspective. In On Painting 24
      Leon Battista Alberti, 1540

      1.5 Account of the late Mr. [Robert] Barker 29
      Anonymous, 1806

      1.6 Description of the Process of Painting and Effects of Light Invented by Daguerre, and Applied by Him to the Pictures of the Diorama 31
      Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre, 1839

      2 Invention to Pictorialism: 1839–c. 1880 35

      What is Photography? 37

      2.1 Some Account of the Art of Photogenic Drawing 38
      William Henry Fox Talbot, 1839 [March]

      2.2 The Pencil of Nature. A New Discovery 44
      Nathaniel Parker Willis and Timothy O. Porter, eds., 1839 [April]

      2.3 Report [on the Daguerreotype to the Chamber of Deputies] 48
      François Arago, 1839 [July]

      Art/History 55

      2.4 Upon Photography in an Artistic View, and in Its Relations to the Arts 56
      Sir William J. Newton, 1853

      2.5 La Photographie 59
      Antoine Joseph Wiertz, 1855

      2.6 Photography 61
      Eastlake, Lady (Elizabeth) 1857

      Camera/Vision 67

      2.7 The Stereoscope and the Stereograph 68
      Oliver Wendell Holmes, 1859

      2.8 Combination Printing. In Pictorial Effect in Photography 72
      Henry Peach Robinson, 1869

      2.9 Annals of My Glass House 76
      Julia Margaret Cameron, 1874

      3 Pictorialism to/and/vs. Modernism: c. 1880–c. 1920 81

      Camera/Vision 83

      3.1 Focussing. In Naturalistic Photography for Students of the Art 84
      Peter Henry Emerson, 1890

      3.2 The Death of Naturalistic Photography 88
      Peter Henry Emerson, 1890

      3.3 The Hand Camera — Its Present Importance 91
      Alfred Stieglitz, 1896

      Interdisciplinary Approaches 95

      3.4 Photo-Chemical Investigations and a New Method of Determination of the Sensitiveness of Photographic Plates 96
      Ferdinand Hurter and Vero C. Driffield, 1890

      3.5 Logic as Semiotic: The Theory of Signs 100
      Charles Sanders Peirce, c. 1900

      3.6 Intuition and Art. In Æsthetic: As Science of Expression and General Linguistic 105
      Benedetto Croce, 1902

      3.7 The Cinematographical Mechanism of Thought and the Mechanistic Illusion…. In Creative Evolution 108
      Henri Bergson, 1907

      What Should Photographs Look Like? 113

      3.8 On the Straight Print 114
      Robert Demachy, 1907

      3.9 What is a “Straight Print”? 118
      Frederick H. Evans, 1907

      3.10 Photography and Artistic-Photography 121
      Marius de Zayas, 1913

      4 Modernism to Postmodernism: c. 1920–c. 1960 123

      Camera/Vision 125

      4.1 Photography and the New God 126
      Paul Strand, 1922

      4.2 Light: A Medium of Plastic Expression 130
      László Moholy-Nagy, 1923

      4.3 Seeing Photographically 132
      Edward Weston, 1943

      4.4 The Camera’s Glass Eye 136
      Clement Greenberg, 1946

      What Should Photographs Look Like? 139

      4.5 Aims 140
      Albert Renger-Patzsch, 1927

      4.6 A Personal Credo 142
      Ansel Adams, 1943

      4.7 Our Illustrations 147
      Frank R. Fraprie, 1943

      4.8 Photography at the Crossroads 150
      Berenice Abbott, 1951

      Art/History 155

      4.9 Excerpts from Perspective as Symbolic Form 156
      Erwin Panofsky, 1927

      4.10 The Age of the World Picture 161
      Martin Heidegger, 1938/52

      4.11 Excerpts from Museum Without Walls 164
      André Malraux, 1947

      Interdisciplinary Approaches 169

      4.12 Photography and Typography 170
      Jan Tschichold, 1928

      4.13 The Making of a Film. In Film as Art 174
      Rudolph Arnheim, 1932

      4.14 The Ontology of the Photographic Image. In What Is Cinema? 176
      André Bazin, 1945

      What is Photography? 181

      4.15 Mechanism and Expression, the Essence and Value of Photography 182
      Franz Roh, 1929

      4.16 Introduction to The Decisive Moment 188
      Henri Cartier-Bresson, 1952

      4.17 Photography 192
      Siegfried Kracauer, 1960

      5 Modernism and Postmodernism to Digital Imaging: c. 1960–c. 1990 199

      Art/History 201

      5.1 Equivalence: The Perennial Trend 202
      Minor White, 1963

      5.2 Perspective. In Languages of Art 207
      Nelson Goodman, 1968

      5.3 Can There Ever Again Be a History of Photography? 211
      Peter C. Bunnell, 1975

      5.4 Introduction to Before Photography: Painting and the Invention of Photography 214
      Peter Galassi, 1981

      5.5 New Metaphorics: Spirit and Symbol in Contemporary Landscape Photography 219
      Gretchen Garner, 1988

      Camera/Vision 225

      5.6 Introduction to The Photographer’s Eye 226
      John Szarkowski, 1966

      5.7 Post-Visualization 232
      Jerry Uelsmann, 1967

      5.8 Introduction to New Topographics 235
      William Jenkins, 1975

      Interdisciplinary Approaches 239

      5.9 Excerpts from The World Viewed 240
      Stanley Cavell, 1971

      5.10 Notes on the Index: Seventies Art in America 246
      Rosalind Krauss, 1977

      5.11 Photography and Fetish 251
      Christian Metz, 1985

      5.12 Film, Photography, and Fetish: The Analyses of Christian Metz 256
      Ben Singer, 1988

      What is Photography? 263

      5.13 On the Nature of Photography 264
      Rudolf Arnheim, 1974

      5.14 Photography, Vision, and Representation 269
      Joel Snyder and Neil Walsh Allen, 1975

      5.15 The Directorial Mode: Notes Toward a Definition 276
      A. D. Coleman, 1976

      5.16 Selections from Transparent Pictures: On the Nature of Photographic Realism 284
      Kendall L.Walton, 1984

      5.17 The Photograph as Post-Industrial Object: An Essay on the Ontological Standing of Photographs 290
      Vilém Flusser, 1986

      Identity/Politics 295

      5.18 The Traffic in Photographs 296
      Allan Sekula, 1981

      5.19 Of Mother Nature and Marlboro Men: An Inquiry into the Cultural Meanings of Landscape Photography 302
      Deborah Bright, 1985

      5.20 Excerpts from Right of Inspection 310
      Jacques Derrida, 1985

      5.21 Fetal Images: The Power of Visual Culture in the Politics of Reproduction 315
      Rosalind Pollack Petchesky, 1987

      6 Postmodernism and Digital Imaging (Return to Pictorialism?): c. 1990–c. 2010 319

      What is Digital Photography? 321

      6.1 The Transcendental Machine? A Comparison of Digital Photography and Nineteenth-Century Modes of Photographic Representation 322
      Diana Emery Hulick, 1990

      6.2 Photojournalism in the Age of Computers 329
      Fred Ritchin, 1990

      6.3 Phantasm: Digital Imaging and the Death of Photography. In Metamorphoses 334
      Geoffrey Batchen, 1994

      6.4 Escaping Reality: Digital Imagery and the Resources of Photography 338
      Barbara E. Savedoff, 1997

      6.5 Fixing the Art of Digital Photography: Electronic Shadows 344
      Ellen Handy, 1998

      6.6 Digital Ontologies: The Ideality of Form in/and Code Storage — or — Can Graphesis Challenge Mathesis? 350
      Johanna Drucker, 2001

      Identity/Politics 355

      6.7 Do Not Doubt the Dangerousness of the 12-Inch-Tall Politician 356
      David Wojnarowicz, 1991

      6.8 The Politics of Focus: Feminism and Photography Theory 359
      Lindsay Smith, 1992

      6.9 Re-Picturing Photography: A Language in the Making 365
      Aphrodite Désirée Navab, 2001

      6.10 A Painful Labour: Responsibility and Photography 370
      Sharon Sliwinski, 2004

      Camera/Vision 377

      6.11 Clement Greenberg and Walker Evans: Transparency and Transcendence 378
      Mike Weaver, 1991

      6.12 The Shadows on the Wall. In The Reconfigured Eye: Visual Truth in the Post-Photographic Era 382
      William J. Mitchell, 1992

      6.13 Of Fish, Birds, Cats, Mice, Spiders, Flies, Pigs, and Chimpanzees: How Chance Casts the Historic Action Photograph into Doubt 384
      Robin Kelsey, 2009

      Art/History 389

      6.14 The Invisible Dragon: On Beauty I 390
      Dave Hickey, 1991

      6.15 The Idiom in Photography as the Truth in Painting 394
      Rosemary Hawker, 2002

      6.16 “Impressed by Nature’s Hand”: Photography and Authorship 399
      Douglas R. Nickel, 2009

      Photography and Memory 407

      6.17 Surviving Images: Holocaust Photographs and the Work of Postmemory 408
      Marianne Hirsch, 2001

      6.18 Visualizing Memory: Photographs and the Art of Biography 412
      Deborah Willis, 2003

      6.19 Remembering September 11: Photography as Cultural Diplomacy 415
      Liam Kennedy, 2003

      6.20 Through a Glass, Darkly: Photography and Cultural Memory 421
      Alan Trachtenberg, 2008

      Interdisciplinary Approaches 425

      6.21 Curiosity and Conjecture: Mathematics, Photography, and the Imagination 426
      David Travis, 2003

      6.22 Image as Trace: Speculations about an Undead Paradigm 429
      Peter Geimer, 2007

      6.23 The Photographic Argument of Philosophy 436
      Alexander Sekatskiy, 2010

      Works Cited and Further Reading 440

      Credits, Sources, and Acknowledgments 449

      Acknowledgments 454

      Index 456

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