Description

Book Synopsis

Throughout Germany’s tumultuous twentieth century, photography was an indispensable form of documentation. Whether acting as artists, witnesses, or reformers, both professional and amateur photographers chronicled social worlds through successive periods of radical upheaval. The Ethics of Seeing brings together an international group of scholars to explore the complex relationship between the visual and the historic in German history. Emphasizing the transformation of the visual arena and the ways in which ordinary people made sense of world events, these revealing case studies illustrate photography’s multilayered role as a new form of representation, a means to subjective experience, and a fresh mode of narrating the past.



Trade Review

“The contributions of the volume are almost invariably subtle, insightful and illuminating…What [they] demonstrate, with exceptional clarity, is that no German history is complete without photography—and that geographical boundaries and chronological sub-divisions of this history we have come to take for granted are often challenged by the way images and ways of seeing moved across them.” • German History

“Asking what photographs ‘do’ to history is a deceivingly simple question with pressing and increasingly complex answers for historians working in the digital age. As such, this book is both essential reding for scholars delving into visual history as well as a helpful guide for historians considering the ethical implications of photography and its uses in the modern era.” • German Studies Review

“In the work’s epilogue, Julia Adeney Thomas reminds readers that photography is fraught with moral questions, and photographers and viewers alike need to develop an ethics for the medium. This is a welcome conclusion to a volume, the premise of which is in many ways fundamentally moral.” • Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature

“…traditionally, photographs have been treated as a kind of secondary or tertiary source with which apprentice historians should engage only after they master the ‘real’ or ‘more important’ meat and potatoes of the historical profession: the traditional archival document.…The contributors to The Ethics of Seeing do a tremendous service by challenging this orthodoxy. The issue this volume raises, then, is not only ‘What can the scholarly methods of history tell us about photographs?’ but also ‘What can photographs tell us about historical method?’” • The German Quarterly

The Ethics of Seeing gathers together very useful and highly readable contributions to the history of German photography. These stimulating essays give a broad perspective on the German twentieth century, and in many cases address important gaps in the historical record.” • Simon Ward, Durham University

“This is a profoundly important contribution to the field. It analyzes an impressively wide range of photographic materials—including artistic, scientific, vernacular, queer, colonial, institutional, and journalistic sources—in a way that enriches art history while also addressing the specific concerns of historians working in visual culture.” • Donna West Brett, The University of Sydney



Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements

Introduction: Photography as an Ethics of Seeing
Jennifer Evans

Chapter 1. Thoughts on Photography and the Practice of History
Elizabeth Edwards

Chapter 2. Seeing the ‘Savage’ and the Suspension of Time: Photography, War and Concentration Camps in South West Africa, 1904-1908
Claudia Siebrecht

Chapter 3. The “Face of War” in Weimar Visual Culture
Annelie Ramsbrock

Chapter 4. Documenting Heimkehr: Photography, Displacement and “Homecoming” in the Nazi Resettlement of Ethnic Germans, 1939-1940
Elizabeth Harvey

Chapter 5. Visible Trophies of War: German Occupiers’ Photographic Perceptions of France, 1940-44
Julia Torrie

Chapter 6. Gazing at Ruins: German Defeat as Visual Experience
Stefan-Ludwig Hoffmann

Chapter 7. Edmund Kesting’s Polyphonic Portraits and the Abstract Face of the Socialist Self in East Germany
Sarah E. James

Chapter 8. Seeing Subjectivity: Erotic Photography and the Optics of Desire
Jennifer Evans

Chapter 9. Photographing Reurbanization in West Berlin, 1977-84
Anna Ross

Chapter 10. The Diversification of East Germany’s Visual Culture
Candice M. Hamelin

Chapter 11. The Intimacy of Revolution: 1989 in Pictures
Paul Betts

Epilogue: Hope Flies, Death Dances: Moving Toward an Ethics of Seeing
Julia Adeney Thomas

Index

The Ethics of Seeing: Photography and

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    A Paperback / softback by Jennifer Evans, Paul Betts, Stefan-Ludwig Hoffmann

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      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 12/07/2019
      ISBN13: 9781789205183, 978-1789205183
      ISBN10: 1789205182

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Throughout Germany’s tumultuous twentieth century, photography was an indispensable form of documentation. Whether acting as artists, witnesses, or reformers, both professional and amateur photographers chronicled social worlds through successive periods of radical upheaval. The Ethics of Seeing brings together an international group of scholars to explore the complex relationship between the visual and the historic in German history. Emphasizing the transformation of the visual arena and the ways in which ordinary people made sense of world events, these revealing case studies illustrate photography’s multilayered role as a new form of representation, a means to subjective experience, and a fresh mode of narrating the past.



      Trade Review

      “The contributions of the volume are almost invariably subtle, insightful and illuminating…What [they] demonstrate, with exceptional clarity, is that no German history is complete without photography—and that geographical boundaries and chronological sub-divisions of this history we have come to take for granted are often challenged by the way images and ways of seeing moved across them.” • German History

      “Asking what photographs ‘do’ to history is a deceivingly simple question with pressing and increasingly complex answers for historians working in the digital age. As such, this book is both essential reding for scholars delving into visual history as well as a helpful guide for historians considering the ethical implications of photography and its uses in the modern era.” • German Studies Review

      “In the work’s epilogue, Julia Adeney Thomas reminds readers that photography is fraught with moral questions, and photographers and viewers alike need to develop an ethics for the medium. This is a welcome conclusion to a volume, the premise of which is in many ways fundamentally moral.” • Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature

      “…traditionally, photographs have been treated as a kind of secondary or tertiary source with which apprentice historians should engage only after they master the ‘real’ or ‘more important’ meat and potatoes of the historical profession: the traditional archival document.…The contributors to The Ethics of Seeing do a tremendous service by challenging this orthodoxy. The issue this volume raises, then, is not only ‘What can the scholarly methods of history tell us about photographs?’ but also ‘What can photographs tell us about historical method?’” • The German Quarterly

      The Ethics of Seeing gathers together very useful and highly readable contributions to the history of German photography. These stimulating essays give a broad perspective on the German twentieth century, and in many cases address important gaps in the historical record.” • Simon Ward, Durham University

      “This is a profoundly important contribution to the field. It analyzes an impressively wide range of photographic materials—including artistic, scientific, vernacular, queer, colonial, institutional, and journalistic sources—in a way that enriches art history while also addressing the specific concerns of historians working in visual culture.” • Donna West Brett, The University of Sydney



      Table of Contents

      List of Illustrations
      Acknowledgements

      Introduction: Photography as an Ethics of Seeing
      Jennifer Evans

      Chapter 1. Thoughts on Photography and the Practice of History
      Elizabeth Edwards

      Chapter 2. Seeing the ‘Savage’ and the Suspension of Time: Photography, War and Concentration Camps in South West Africa, 1904-1908
      Claudia Siebrecht

      Chapter 3. The “Face of War” in Weimar Visual Culture
      Annelie Ramsbrock

      Chapter 4. Documenting Heimkehr: Photography, Displacement and “Homecoming” in the Nazi Resettlement of Ethnic Germans, 1939-1940
      Elizabeth Harvey

      Chapter 5. Visible Trophies of War: German Occupiers’ Photographic Perceptions of France, 1940-44
      Julia Torrie

      Chapter 6. Gazing at Ruins: German Defeat as Visual Experience
      Stefan-Ludwig Hoffmann

      Chapter 7. Edmund Kesting’s Polyphonic Portraits and the Abstract Face of the Socialist Self in East Germany
      Sarah E. James

      Chapter 8. Seeing Subjectivity: Erotic Photography and the Optics of Desire
      Jennifer Evans

      Chapter 9. Photographing Reurbanization in West Berlin, 1977-84
      Anna Ross

      Chapter 10. The Diversification of East Germany’s Visual Culture
      Candice M. Hamelin

      Chapter 11. The Intimacy of Revolution: 1989 in Pictures
      Paul Betts

      Epilogue: Hope Flies, Death Dances: Moving Toward an Ethics of Seeing
      Julia Adeney Thomas

      Index

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