Results for 'photographic event'

1000+ found
Order:
  1. Philosophical Scepticism and the Photographic Event.Dawn M. Wilson - 2012 - In Jan-Erik Lundström & Liv Stoltz (eds.), Thinking Photography - Using Photography. Centrum för Fotografi. pp. 98-109.
    The puzzle that concerns me is whether it is possible to establish a substantive difference between photographic images and other kinds of visual image, which can explain the special epistemic and aesthetic qualities of photographs, without giving way to scepticism about photographic art. In this essay I offer a philosophical account of the photographic process which is able to resolve this tension. I use this account to argue that, while some photographs are mind independent, mind independence is (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  2.  6
    The Event-Shaped Hole, and the Photographic Image.Raqs Media Collective - 2021 - Nordic Journal of Aesthetics 30 (61-62):154-159.
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  3.  36
    Photographs, symbolic images, and the holocaust: On the (im)possibility of depicting historical truth.Judith Keilbach - 2009 - History and Theory 48 (2):54-76.
    Photography has often been scrutinized regarding its relationship to reality or historical truth. This includes not only the indexicality of photography, but also the question of how structures and processes that comprise history and historical events can be depicted. In this context, the Holocaust provides a particular challenge to photography. As has been discussed in numerous publications, this historic event marks the “limits of representation.” Nevertheless there are many photographs “showing” the Holocaust that have been produced in different contexts (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  4.  19
    Photographically unconcealing the crimes: Christian Patterson’s Redheaded Peckerwood and Heidegger’s aletheia.Emma Bennett - 2013 - Philosophy of Photography 4 (1):47-71.
    Photographic truth has traditionally been theorized on the basis of ‘correctness’, whereby the image’s mechanically produced correspondence to reality guarantees its truth. This article suggests that Christian Patterson’s photobook Redheaded Peckerwood (2011) engages with a notion of photographic truth that can more usefully be understood in relation to Martin Heidegger’s descriptions of truth as aletheia or ‘unconcealing’. By including ambiguity, mystery and fiction in this nonetheless seemingly truthful retelling of historical events, the work suggests that a straightforward notion (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  5. Against Imprinting: The Photographic Image as a Source of Evidence.Dawn M. Wilson - 2022 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 89 (4):947-969.
    A photographic image is said to provide evidence of a photographed scene because it is a causal imprint of reflected light, an indexical trace of real objects and events. Though widely established in the history, theory, and philosophy of photography, this traditional imprinting model must be rejected because it relies on a “single-stage” misconception of the photographic process: the idea that a photographic image comes into existence at the time of exposure. In its place, a “multistage” account (...)
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  6.  13
    The photographers’ gaze: the Mobile Radioisotope Exhibition in Latin America (1960–1965).Gisela Mateos & Edna Suárez-Díaz - 2023 - Annals of Science 80 (1):62-76.
    During the IAEA’s Mobile Radioisotope Exhibition (1960–1965) through the eventful roads of five Latin American countries (Mexico, Uruguay, Argentina, Brazil, and Bolivia), a variety of photographs were taken by an unknown Mexican official photographer, and by Josef Obermayer, a staff driver from Vienna. The exhibition carried not only bits of nuclear sciences and technologies, but also the political symbolism of the ‘friendly atom’ as a token of modernization. The photographs embarked on different trajectories, though all of them ended up at (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  7.  26
    Photographic but not line-drawn faces show early perceptual neural sensitivity to eye gaze direction.Alejandra Rossi, Francisco J. Parada, Marianne Latinus & Aina Puce - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9:98381.
    Our brains readily decode facial movements and changes in social attention, reflected in earlier and larger N170 event-related potentials (ERPs) to viewing gaze aversions vs. direct gaze in real faces (Puce et al. 2000). In contrast, gaze aversions in line-drawn faces do not produce these N170 differences (Rossi et al., 2014), suggesting that physical stimulus properties or experimental context may drive these effects. Here we investigated the role of stimulus-induced context on neurophysiological responses to dynamic gaze. Sixteen healthy adults (...)
    Direct download (7 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations  
  8.  7
    Teenie Harris, Photographer: Image, Memory, History.Cheryl Finley, Laurence Admiral Glasco & Joe William Trotter - 2011 - University of Pittsburgh Press.
    "Charles "Teenie" Harris photographed the events and daily life of African Americans for the Pittsburgh Courier, one of the nation's most influential Black newspapers. From the 1930s to 1970s, Harris created a richly detailed record of public personalities, historic events, and the lives of average people. In 2001, Carnegie Museum of Art purchased Harris's archive of nearly 80,000 photographic negatives, few of which are titled and dated; the archive is considered one of the most important documentations of 20th?century African (...)
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  9.  27
    Dust Plate, Retina, Photograph: Imaging on Experimental Surfaces in Early Nineteenth-Century Physics.Chitra Ramalingam - 2015 - Science in Context 28 (3):317-355.
    ArgumentThis article explores the entangled histories of three imaging techniques in early nineteenth-century British physical science, techniques in which a dynamic event (such as a sound vibration or an electric spark) was made to leave behind a fixed trace on a sensitive surface. Three categories of “sensitive surface” are examined in turn: first, a metal plate covered in fine dust; second, the retina of the human eye; and finally, a surface covered with a light-sensitive chemical emulsion (a photographic (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  10. Phenomenology of a Photograph, or: How to use an Eidetic Phenomenology.L. Sebastian Purcell - 2010 - PhaenEx 5 (1):12-40.
    The present article aims to make good on Roland Barthe’s unfulfilled promise to provide an eidetic phenomenology for the photograph. Though the matter deserves consideration simply because no relevant account has yet been provided, the consequences of adumbrating eight eidetic features, we hope to show, bear directly on the phenomenology of time, the possibility of technological events, and the status of truth as what Heidegger called alētheia . Finally, and most importantly for the enterprise of phenomenological reflection, if we are (...)
    Direct download (15 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  11.  5
    Once Upon an Island: Photographs of Manhattan, 1969–1970.Richard Quinney - 2011 - Borderland Books.
    As the decade of the 1960s drew to a close, Richard Quinney walked the streets of Manhattan with camera in hand, documenting the life of the city. For forty years, as he relocated from one place to another, the photographs he had taken in Manhattan went with him. After the events of September 11, 2001, the photographic images acquired a meaning and significance beyond anything he could have imagined. Once Upon an Island contains 175 photographs of Manhattan, including color (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  12.  8
    Picturing Utopia: Bertha Shambaugh and the Amana Photographers.Abigail Foerstner - 2005 - University of Iowa Press.
    A collection of period photographs of the Amana Colonies, a utopian religious community located near Iowa City, furnishes a rare, inside glimpse of the people, events, and lifestyle of a nineteenth-century religious commune, in a ...
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  13.  37
    Collision: Poverty/Line: Aesthetic and Political Subjects in Santiago Sierra’s “Line” Photographs.David W. Janzen - 2015 - Evental Aesthetics 4 (1):63-70.
    FEATURED IN EVENTAL AESTHETICS RETROSPECTIVE 1. LOOKING BACK AT 10 ISSUES OF EVENTAL AESTHETICS. This Collision examines photographs of Santiago Sierra’s “Line” installations, discovering in these works a unique formulation of the tension between the social and formal aspects of contemporary art. Developing the philosophical implications of this formulation, this essay connects divergent trajectories embodied by the work (i.e. trajectories initiated by the material elements of the works, the body and the line) to divergent trajectories in contemporary aesthetic theory (i.e. (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  14. Infinite exchange: The social ontology of the photographic image.Peter Osborne - 2010 - Philosophy of Photography 1 (1):59-68.
    This paper approaches the problem of the ontology of the photographic image ‘post-digitalization’ historically, via a conception of photography as the historical totality of photographic forms. It argues, first, that photography is not best understood as a particular art or medium, but rather in terms of the form of the image it produces; second, that the photographic image is the main social form of the digital image ; and third, that there is no fundamental ontological distinction regarding (...)
    Direct download (10 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   6 citations  
  15.  11
    Hard Luck Blues: Roots Music Photographs From the Great Depression.Rich Remsberg - 2010 - University of Illinois Press.
    Showcasing American music and music making during the Great Depression, Hard Luck Blues presents more than two hundred photographs created by the New Deal's Farm Security Administration photography program. With an appreciation for the amateur and the local, FSA photographers depicted a range of musicians sharing the regular music of everyday life, from informal songs in migrant work camps, farmers' homes, barn dances, and on street corners to organized performances at church revivals, dance halls, and community festivals. Captured across the (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  16.  3
    To Remember a Vanishing World: D. L. Hightower's Photographs of Barbour County, Alabama, C. 1930-1965.Michael V. R. Thomason - 1997 - University Alabama Press.
    This remarkable collection of period photographs details day-to-day life and changing times in the Deep South. Draffus Lamar Hightower, 1899-1993, spent most of his life in Barbour County, Alabama. For many years he was the owner of a Chevrolet dealership, but he had another occupation as well. From his youth, he was fascinated with photography, and for fifty years he experimented with the craft both technically and artistically. Hightower, while participating fully in the 20th century, was also acutely aware of (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  17.  7
    In Focus: Laszlo Moholy-Nagy: Photographs From the J. Paul Getty Museum.Katherine Ware - 1994 - J. Paul Getty Museum.
    In Focus: Laszlo Moholy-Nagy reproduces almost fifty of the artist's photographs, with commentaries on each by katherine Ware, an Assistant Curator in the Musuem's Department of Photographs. Included as well is an edited transcript of a colloquim on Moholy-Nagy's work, with comments by Thomas Barrow, Jeannine Fiedler, Charles Hagen, Hattula Moholy-Nagy, Weston Naef, Leland Rice, and Katherine Ware. A chronology of significant events in the artist's life is also provided.
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  18.  32
    Kandahar Dispatches: Notebooks, Diaries + Photographs.Louie Palu - 2011 - Theory and Event 14 (2).
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  19.  30
    Afterimages: Belated Witnessing in the Photographs of the Armenian Catastrophe.Emmanuel Alloa - 2015 - Ournal of Literature and Trauma Studies 4 (1):43-65.
    The category of « postmemory » has been invoked by Marianne Hirsch to refer to a traumatic past which is not directly remembered in first person, but is handed down to later generations and is recalled through the mediation of narratives and images which become “prostheses” for a lack of direct memory. But how is it that these prosthetic recollections do not simply substitute for what lacks but seem to shape the very events they are meant to reproduce ? How (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  20.  17
    Developing and implementing a sparse ontology with a visual index for personal photograph retrieval.Paul D. B. Bujac & John Kerins - 2009 - AI and Society 24 (4):383-392.
    The advent of digital cameras has provided photographers, with varying levels of expertise, the opportunity to accumulate large repositories of digital images. However, this expansion has also brought the attendant difficulty of image retrieval. This paper reviews the considerable work already carried out on image retrieval and identifies critical constraints in attempting to handle the underlying semantics of photographic images. The authors address the issue of how an amateur photographer, storing several thousand images a year, can effectively and efficiently (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  21.  20
    We Are Still Here: A Photographic History of the American Indian Movement.Dick Bancroft, Laura Waterman Wittstock & Rigoberto Menchu Tum - 2013 - Borealis Books.
    The American Indian Movement, founded in 1968 in Minneapolis, burst into that turbulent time with passion, anger, and radical acts of resistance. Spurred by the Civil Rights movement, Native people began to protest the decades--centuries--of corruption, racism, and abuse they had endured. They argued for political, social, and cultural change, and they got attention. The photographs of activist Dick Bancroft, a key documentarian of AIM, provide a stunningly intimate view of this major piece of American history from 1970 to 1981. (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  22. Collision: Poverty/Line: Aesthetic and Political Subjects in Santiago Sierra's “Line” Photographs.David W. Janzen - 2014 - Evental Aesthetics 2 (4):56-65.
    This Collision examines photographs of Santiago Sierra’s “Line” installations, discovering in these works a unique formulation of the tension between the social and formal aspects of contemporary art. Developing the philosophical implications of this formulation, this essay connects divergent trajectories embodied by the work (i.e. trajectories initiated by the material elements of the works, the body and the line) to divergent trajectories in contemporary aesthetic theory (i.e. the trajectory that emphasises the socio-political possibilities of artistic representation versus the trajectory that (...)
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  23. Photography and causation: Responding to Scruton's scepticism.Dawn M. Phillips - 2009 - British Journal of Aesthetics 49 (4):327-340.
    According to Roger Scruton, it is not possible for photographs to be representational art. Most responses to Scruton’s scepticism are versions of the claim that Scruton disregards the extent to which intentionality features in photography; but these cannot force him to give up his notion of the ideal photograph. My approach is to argue that Scruton has misconstrued the role of causation in his discussion of photography. I claim that although Scruton insists that the ideal photograph is defined by its (...)
    Direct download (7 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   21 citations  
  24.  59
    What's So New about the “New” Theory of Photography?Diarmuid Costello - 2017 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 75 (4):439-452.
    This article considers the shift currently taking place in philosophical thinking about photography. What I call “new” theory departs from philosophical orthodoxy with respect to when a photograph comes into existence, a difference with far-reaching consequences. I trace this to Dawn Wilson on the “photographic event.” To assess the new theory's newness one needs a grip on the old. I divide this between “skeptical” and “nonskeptical” orthodoxy, where this turns on the theory's implications for photography's standing as art. (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   8 citations  
  25.  85
    Seven theses on photography.Christopher Pinney - 2012 - Thesis Eleven 113 (1):141-156.
    Benjamin and Barthes provide the starting point for a series of inter-connected propositions which seek to return the theorization of photography to the primacy of the pro-filmic. The index is reclaimed as a trace of the photographic event, capable only of delivering what Barthes termed the corps. The resulting contingency and exorbitance are the basis of photography’s prophetic and ‘troubling’ potential which free us from viewing photography as simply a screen for the social. The argument is advanced largely (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  26.  6
    The Knowing Eye.Dominic McIver Lopes - 2015 - In Four Arts of Photography. Wiley. pp. 105–113.
    Having been invented by scientists, who first saw it as a new tool of inquiry and only later began to suspect the possibility of photographic art, photography's special epistemic character has dominated thinking about its nature. Photographs are introduced as evidence in scientific reports, journalism, and courts of law. They can also be used to make discoveries. According to the new theory of photography, a photograph is a product of a photographic process where an artifactual image is rendered (...)
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  27.  25
    Fatima pictures and testimonials: in-depth analysis.Philippe Dalleur - 2021 - Scientia et Fides 9 (1):9-45.
    Using photographs and testimonials, we will analyze details of the “miracle of the spinning sun” on October 13, 1917, at solar noon near Fatima. The phenomenon predicted ahead of time, occurred as the clouds cleared on what began as a rainy day. Various explanations have been presented but do not stand up to a comparative analysis of eyewitnesses, weather data, and photographs. This article aims to bring clarity to this event through the analysis of certified photographs and testimonies comparing (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations  
  28.  58
    Dynamic network rewiring determines temporal regulatory functions in Drosophilamelanogaster development processes.Man-Sun Kim, Jeong-Rae Kim & Kwang-Hyun Cho - 2010 - Bioessays 32 (6):505-513.
    Cover Photograph: Resolving developmental genetics in the fourth dimension: an illustration (by Kwang‐Hyun Cho himself) of the principle of dynamic network motifs in Drosophila development. Hitherto largely considered in terms of time‐invariant networks, drosophila development is viewed in the article by Man‐Sun Kim, Jeong‐Rae Kim, and Kwang‐Hyun Cho as the result of networks of gene interactions that change during the course of development. Using this paradigm, pivotal developmental events can be correlated with particular changes from one constellation of gene interactions (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  29.  4
    Staring Back.Chris Marker - 2007 - MIT Press.
    Photographs by one of French cinema's most influential and enigmatic artists. Any new film and any new book by French filmmaker Chris Marker is an event. Marker gave film lovers one of their most memorable experiences with La Jetée —a time-travel montage set after a nuclear war that inspired Terry Gilliam's Twelve Monkeys. His still camerawork is not as well known, but Marker has been taking photographs as long as he has been making films. Staring Back presents 200 black-and-white (...)
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  30. Wachten op beeld - De tragische retorica van Iconische foto’s.Rob van Gerwen - 2013 - Algemeen Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Wijsbegeerte 105 (1):40-54.
    Iconic photographs are visual arguments depicting an, often dramatic, particular situation showing victims of disasters. Spectators watching the photo of the particular situation, empathise with it, and project the feelings evoked onto the events that form the context for the scene in the picture. This mobilises them into political action. In the process, however, the depicted personal misery is perused to exemplify the larger events. The tragedy of iconic photographs is analysed not as the misery experienced by the depicted persons, (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (5 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  31.  9
    Photography at the Crossroads with Historical Remembrance.Silke Helmerdig - 2021 - Environment, Space, Place 13 (2):1-24.
    Abstract:Photographic representation promises the possibility of an identical reappearance, which has often been labeled as a window to the past moment, as if one were just looking through the image surface to the moment itself. But the represented past present is actually always already different in every present in which it is presented.In the story of Butades’s daughter, in which a young woman traces the shadow of her lover, who will soon march off to war, the drawing will only (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  32.  2
    The Media of Photography.Diarmuid Costello - 2012 - Wiley-Blackwell.
    Two events in particular occasion this volume on the philosophy of photography: the blurring of boundaries that many took to demarcate photographic technology and practices from other representational and artistic technologies and the invention of digital photography. The purpose of this volume is not to revive older questions by asking what, if anything, still distinguishes photography in the light of these developments, but to consider sundry questions about the materials and tools—or media—of photography from a variety of perspectives. critically (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  33.  11
    Амбівалентність ролі «автора» у фотографічному зображенні.Yuliia Petruk - 2018 - Наукові Записки Наукма. Філософія Та Релігієзнавство 2:17-25.
    This article questions the role of the author in the photographical image. Undoubtedly, the invention of photography has changed our attitude towards ourselves, towards the world. The impact of photography on one’s life is growing with the development of technology, mainly the photo-technology. One cannot but trust technological tools more than oneself, because any technological device nowadays is considered to be smarter, faster, and more precise than any human being. The technology plays a special role in photography, and that is (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  34.  39
    Timeless Traces of Temporal Patterns.John Kulvicki - 2016 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 74 (4):335-346.
    Long-exposure photographs present distinctive philosophical challenges. They do not quite look like things in motion. Experiences of such photos take time, but not in a way that mimics the time of the motion depicted. In fact, it would not be off base to worry that these photos fail, strictly speaking, to depict motion or things-in-time. And if they fail to depict motion, then it is an interesting question what, if anything, they succeed in depicting. These timeless traces of temporal patterns (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   6 citations  
  35.  7
    Discourse of Foreign Digital Media: Analysis of the 2023 Turkish Presidential Election Coverage.Özden Özlü - 2024 - Akademik İncelemeler Dergisi 19 (1):119-136.
    This study examines the complex dynamics of communication in the changing field of journalism influenced by the use of media. It specifically focuses on how thoughts and perceptions are expressed in this evolving landscape. Information and communication technologies significantly influence journalism by rapidly disseminating news, updates, and societal impacts. Utilizing critical discourse analysis, the study aims to reveal systematic language usages and uncover latent meanings beyond news texts. Focused on the 2023 Turkish Presidential Election, news texts from four prominent international (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  36.  6
    Home Front: American Flags From Across the United States.Peter Elliott - 2002 - Lily Bay Press.
    After the horrendous events of September 2001, photographer Peter Elliott loaded his cameras and some clothes into his car and began a cross-country journey, looking for the flag. He found it everywhere: painted on a retaining wall in Tacoma, flying over a trailer in Bozeman, carried billowing by a lone man walking a sandbar in Florida, made of plastic cups stuck in a fence in Mississippi, draped over a fake horse in Salinas, immaculately hanging from a Beverly Hills mansion's window. (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  37.  4
    Catholic Mothers and Daughters: Becoming Women.Anne Keary - 2016 - Feminist Theology 24 (2):187-205.
    The socio-historical events and libertarian cultural movements of the 1960s and 1970s shaped the Catholic mother-daughter relationship for the women in this feminist genealogical study. This study is based on interviews with 36 Anglo-Australian Catholic women – 13 sets of mothers and daughters – as well as dialogue between my mother and myself about family photographs. Women’s stories of secondary school days tell of the formation of lady-like identities circumscribed through uniform regulations, the cult of the Virgin Mary and ceremonies (...)
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  38.  12
    The Philosophy of Modern Song.Belle Randall - 2023 - Common Knowledge 29 (2):234-236.
    The Philosophy of Modern Song: curious title, a curious book. If you bought it, as I did, because you are a devoted Dylan fan, hoping to find new Dylan songs inside, or at least new Dylan prose, you will be disappointed. In the photo of three musicians on the cover, none of them is Dylan. The one on the left is Little Richard. Who are the other two? Nowhere are we told their names, nor the names of the people in (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  39.  2
    Lyricism.Dominic McIver Lopes - 2015 - In Four Arts of Photography. Wiley. pp. 87–104.
    Pictorialists prefigure contemporary photographers for whom there are no holds barred when it comes to making an image from a recording event. The difference is that the inventory of image rendering tricks is now colossal. Liberal use of this inventory characterizes the third, lyric, art of photography. In lyric verse, the authors find heightened attention to the musical qualities of language, to the materiality of the sounds of speech, and to their emotional resonances. Lyric photographs tweak the variables of (...)
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  40.  8
    Karl Blossfeldt: Working Collages.Ann Wilde & Jurgen Wilde (eds.) - 2001 - MIT Press.
    Newly discovered photographic collages by early-twentieth-century photographer Karl Blossfeldt. Karl Blossfeldt (1865-1932) achieved overnight fame in the late 1920s with the first publication of his photographs of plants. Those photographs, which revealed the inner structures of the organic forms, immediately made him a pioneer of New Objectivity—an innovative movement in art and photography of the 1920s and 1930s. Blossfeldt, however, was neither a trained photographer nor a botanist. He was a sculptor and art professor who did his photographic (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  41.  30
    Staging history: Aesthetics and the performance of memory.Belarie Zatzman - 2005 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 39 (4):95-103.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Staging History:Aesthetics and the Performance of MemoryBelarie Zatzman (bio)I want to talk about a certain time not measured in months and years. For so long I have wanted to talk about this time, and not in the way I will talk about it now, not just about this one scrap of time. I wanted to, but I couldn't. I didn't know how. I was afraid, too, that this second (...)
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  42. Conceptual and moral ambiguities of deepfakes: a decidedly old turn.Matthew Crippen - 2023 - Synthese 202 (1):1-18.
    Everyday (mis)uses of deepfakes define prevailing conceptualizations of what they are and the moral stakes in their deployment. But one complication in understanding deepfakes is that they are not photographic yet nonetheless manipulate lens-based recordings with the intent of mimicking photographs. The harmfulness of deepfakes, moreover, significantly depends on their potential to be mistaken for photographs and on the belief that photographs capture actual events, a tenet known as the transparency thesis, which scholars have somewhat ironically attacked by citing (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  43.  50
    Compleat Contemplators and Pertinacious Schismaticks: Speculations on the Clash of Two Imaginary Sovereignties at Dale Farm and Meriden. [REVIEW]Ronnie Lippens - 2014 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 27 (4):565-584.
    In this essay two photographs taken during the events at Dale Farm and at Meriden—both involving issues of gypsy and traveller settlement in rural areas—are analysed and interpreted in some depth. Use is thereby made of Izaak Walton’s The Compleat Angler . This book, as is argued in this contribution, includes, in embryonic form, a whole imaginary of forms of sovereignty which, it could be said, is still to a significant extent structuring conflicts between gypsy and traveller communities on the (...)
    Direct download (6 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  44. Realism in film (and other representations).Robert Hopkins - 2016 - In Katherine Thomson-Jones (ed.), Current Controversies in Philosophy of Film. New York: Routledge.
    What is it for a film to be realistic? Of the many answers that have been proposed, I review five: that it is accurate and precise; that is has relatively few prominent formal features; that it is illusionistic; that it is transparent; and that, while plainly a moving picture, it looks to be a photographic recording, not of the actors and sets in fact filmed, but of the events narrated. The number and variety of these options raise a deeper (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   5 citations  
  45. What do we see in film?Robert Hopkins - 2008 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 66 (2):149–159.
    Many films are made by a two-tier process: the photographing of events which themselves represent the story the film tells. The latter representation is often illusionistic. I explore two consequences. The first concerns what we see in film. I argue that we sometimes see in such films, not events representing the story told, but simply the events composing that story. The way is thereby opened to a unified aesthetic of film, whether made the two-tier way or not. The second consequence (...)
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   21 citations  
  46.  17
    The world unseen: Photography as a probe of particulate materiality.Michael Doser - 2016 - Philosophy of Photography 7 (1):139-154.
    This article examines the role of photography in the scientific discovery of cosmic radiation and antimatter, showing how a visual medium designed to react to photons was successfully coopted to detect invisible particles and antiparticles through traces left by their collision, so-called annihilation events. The continuous presence of cosmic radiation means that every photograph is always already a double image, carrying both a visible surface formed by photons and a latent image carrying traces of cosmic rays, the latter ‘image’ continuing (...)
    Direct download (5 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  47.  50
    Between the Horns: A Dilemma in the Interpretation of the Running of the Bulls - Part 2: The Evasion.Jesus Ilundain-Agurruza - 2008 - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 2 (1):18 – 38.
    This second part of the essay deals with the horns of the dilemma at the conceptual level and ?on the street?. The first part ended with that quandary where a deep understanding was precluded no matter which way one turned, whether an inadequate comprehension based on individual and partial notions, a perplexing pluralist path or a relinquishment of the hermeneutic enterprise altogether. The philosophical solution of existential overtones presently put forward deftly avoids the sharp ends of the predicament by means (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   4 citations  
  48.  16
    “Normalizing” Intersex Didn’t Feel Normal or Honest to Me.Karen A. Walsh - 2015 - Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 5 (2):119-122.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:“Normalizing” Intersex Didn’t Feel Normal or Honest to Me.Karen A. WalshI am an intersex woman with Complete Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome (CAIS). My 57–year history with this has its own trajectory—mostly driven by medical events, and how I and my parents reacted. Most of my treatment by physicians has not been positive. It didn’t make me “normal” at all. I was born normal and didn’t require medical interventions. And by (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  49.  16
    The Cruel Radiance: Photography and Political Violence.Susie Linfield - 2010 - University of Chicago Press.
    In The Cruel Radiance, Susie Linfield challenges the idea that photographs of political violence exploit their subjects and pander to the voyeuristic tendencies of their viewers. Instead she argues passionately that looking at such images—and learning to see the people in them—is an ethically and politically necessary act that connects us to our modern history of violence and probes the human capacity for cruelty. Grappling with critics from Walter Benjamin and Bertolt Brecht to Susan Sontag and the postmoderns—and analyzing photographs (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   4 citations  
  50.  39
    When Mrs B Met Jesus during Radiotherapy: A Single Case Study of a Christic Vision: Psychological Prerequisites and Functions and Considerations on Narrative Methodology.Mikael Lundmark - 2010 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 32 (1):27-68.
    This study analyses a Christic vision perceived by a woman during a radiotherapy session for her cervical cancer. A detailed description of the vision is presented based on a photographic documentation of the radiotherapy room, a painting of the vision made by the visionary herself and narratives retold two weeks after the vision, and again, one year later. Perceptual, social, and psychodynamic psychological theories are used to analyze the psychological prerequisites of the vision. It is shown that the vision (...)
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations  
1 — 50 / 1000