Photography: A Cultural History

Photography: A Cultural History

by Mary Warner Marien (Author)

Synopsis

Now available in paperback, this is the first survey of international photography to examine the discipline across the full range of its uses by professionals and amateurs. Each of the eight chapters takes a strict time frame of, say, fifteen to thirty years in which to examine the medium through the lenses of art, science, social science, travel, war, mass media and individual practitioners. The coverage is truly global including rarely seen work from Latin America, Africa, China, Japan, India, and Russia as well as the more established canon of Europe and the United States. Seminal figures, from Julia Margaret Cameron to Cindy Sherman, are profiled, but the emphasis is more on key ideas than individuals. So the reader follows such debates as the nature of discovery/invention, the effect of mass media on morality, the use of imagery as a tool of Western colonialism, and the role of the photograph in advertising, radical politics and family life.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 544
Edition: New edition
Publisher: Laurence King Publishing
Published: 04 Aug 2003

ISBN 10: 1856692892
ISBN 13: 9781856692892

Author Bio
Mary Warner Marien is an associate professor in the Department of Fine Arts at Syracuse University, New York, where she teaches courses on photographic history, as well as on art criticism and its history. She is the author of Photography and its Critics (1997) as well as numerous articles on the history of photography.