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Northern exposures; photographic and filmic representations of the Canadian North, 1920-1945.Geller, Peter G. (Peter Geoffrey), Carleton University. Dissertation. History. January 1995 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Carleton University, 1995. / Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
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Ethics of seeing and politics of place : FSA photography and literature of the American South /Thompson, Angela M. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Oregon, 2006. / Typescript. Includes vita and abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 211-224). Also available for download via the World Wide Web; free to University of Oregon users.
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Le nouveau Documentaire Social : critique et renouveau du documentaire photographique américain sur la côte Ouest des Etats-Unis entre 1970 et 1980 / Toward a New Social Documentary : study of the American documentary photography on the West Coast of the United States between 1970 and 1980Le Tallec, Anne 13 December 2014 (has links)
Un groupe d'étudiants rassemblés par des idéaux artistiques se forme à l'Université de Californie San Diego dans la décennie 1970. Fred Lonidier, Martha Rosier, Allan Sekula et Phel Steinmetz, résolument tournés vers la photographie, élaborent une pensée collective sans toutefois former un groupe officiel. Pourtant, le partage d'une émulation propre à la côte Ouest du pays et à l'université où la pensée de figures tutélaires comme D. Antin, H. Marcuse, J. Baldessari, B. Brecht, H. Lefebvre ou H. Haacke stimule collectivement les esprits, confère aux méthodes et démarches des photographes une résonnance de groupe. En plus, Documentary and Corporate Violence, texte rédigé par A Sekula en 1976, utilise le terme de petit groupe pour qualifier les photographes. Ce texte auquel nous attribuons le statut de manifeste, critique la lecture moderniste des photographes documentaires américains traditionnels. Il expose également les attitudes mises au point par le groupe que nous identifions sous le nom de Nouveau Documentaire Social. Parmi celles-ci se distingue une pratique photographique documentaire ouverte à d'autres médium, une forte présence textuelle, des scénographies et circuits d'exposition repensés, des audiences élargies, un intérêt pour des thématiques ancrées dans l'actualité militante, ou encore un regard vers le quotidien et le banal comme témoins des bouleversements des schémas sociétaux. Objet à déconstruire, la photographie moderniste et les institutions qui la célèbrent représentent une tradition documentaire à renouveler. Ce contexte de remise en question collective et les propositions documentaires qui en sont issues constituent l'objet de cette étude. / A group of students gathered around shared artistic ideals comes to life at University of California San Diego in the nineteen-seventies. Fred Lonidier, Martha Rosier, Allan Sekula and Phel Steinmetz, ail firmly focused on photography, elaborate a collective thought albeit never actually founding an official group. However, a shared emulation endemic to the West Coast and to the university where ideas birthed by leading thinkers such as D. Antin, H. Marcuse, J. Baldessari, B, Brecht, H Lefebvre or H. Haacke collectively stimulates the minds of those around, adds a certain group resonance to the photographers' methods and processes. Furthermore, Documentary and Corporate Violence, a text written by A Sekula in 1976, uses the term small group to refer to the photographers involved This text - to which we give the status of manifesto - criticizes the modernist reading of traditional american documentary photographers. It also exposes the attitudes developed by this group which we coin as New Social Documentary. We will distinguish one of these attitudes from the others : a documentary photographic practice which opens itself to other media, displays a strong textual presence, newly-thought scenography and exhibition paths, widened audiences, an interest in themes strongly anchored in contemporary activism, and which transforms what was so far considered as banal and mundane into testimonies of profound changes in societal structure. Modernist photography, an object to deconstruct, as well as the institutions that celebrate it represent a documentary tradition which needs to be renewed. The new documentary propositions along with the context of collective questioning from which they derive constitute the object of this study.
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Image and imagination : creative photography and the South Wales ValleysCabuts, Paul January 2008 (has links)
Image and Imagination: Creative Photography and the South Wales Valleys, explores the development of practices within photography undertaken in and about the South Wales Valleys during the second half of the twentieth century. Central to this study is an examination of the work of the American photographer W. Eugene Smith, who photographed in the Valleys in 1950, and how his practice influenced the wider development of 'creative photography'. The term 'creative photography' is applied here as a description of photography during a period of its transition, moving beyond a recognised position as a pragmatic communicative medium, toward its wider acknowledgement as a significant form of artistic expression. This study considers a range of processes through which photography largely achieved this acceptance. Particular consideration is given to the development of Smith's career, and how his work moved between ever shifting photo-journalistic and photo-art contexts. Photographers working in the Valleys subsequent to Smith are also examined, including those engaged in the Valleys Project' undertaken during the I980's. This study reveals how social, economic and political factors not only shaped Smith's work, but also shaped the increasingly varied modes of photographic representation seen in the latter part of the twentieth century. The study initially considers the South Wales of the mid-twentieth century and how both cinematic and photographic imagery of the region in the decades prior to 1950 engendered particular photographic responses from later visitors. The national and international contexts for the developments in photographic practice such as magazine and book publishing, along with the growing institutional advocacy for exhibiting photography are also examined. The study concludes with an evaluation of the current status of photographic practice relating to the Valleys of South Wales.
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O cinza e a carne: imagens do Conjunto Habitacional Zezinho Magalhães PradoDinucci, Gina [UNESP] 29 June 2012 (has links) (PDF)
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dinucci_g_me_ia.pdf: 1475358 bytes, checksum: 15bb7c47d97a3ab5009e2b53476a907e (MD5) / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) / Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP) / Esta pesquisa tem como objetivo a apresentação, investigação e leitura da série de fotografias intitulada O Cinza e a Carne, bem como o diálogo entre as referidas imagens e reflexões sobre as capacidades documentais e artísticas da linguagem fotográfica. Para fundamentar tal abordagem, buscou-se aliar um instrumental teórico referente a discursos e conceitos que acompanham a trajetória da fotografia, ao relato da Autora sobre o processo de criação e produção das imagens. A dissertação está, portanto, dividida em três partes: a primeira, com a exposição das fotografias, em um formato de livro de imagens; a segunda, com todo referencial teórico sobre a linguagem fotográfica e a terceira, com o relato das experiências de morar no Parque Cecap e fotografá-lo, além da leitura das imagens / Esta pesquisa tiene como objetivo la presentación, investigación y lectura de la serie de fotografías titulada El Gris y la Carne, bien como el diálogo entre éstas imágenes y reflexiones sobre las capacidades documentales y artísticas del lenguaje fotográfico. Para fundamentar tal abordaje, se ha buscado combinar un instrumental teórico referente a discursos y conceptos que acompañan la trayectoria de la fotografía, a el relato de la Autora acerca del proceso de creación y producción de las imágenes. La disertación está, así, dividida en tres partes: la primera, con la exposición de las fotografías, en un formato de libro de imágenes; la segunda, con todo referencial teórico sobre el lenguaje fotográfico y la tercera, con el relato de las experiencias de vivir en el Parque Cecap y fotografiarlo, además de la lectura de de las imágenes
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The perspective of Cape Town professional photographers on issues of integrity in the documentary photographDeacon, Henry Christopher January 2013 (has links)
Thesis submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree
Magister of Technology: Design
in the Faculty of Informatics and Design
at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology
2013 / This study investigates the perspective of Capetonian professional photographers on issues of integrity, regarding the impact of digital imaging technology. Key objectives are to establish how the concept of photographic integrity manifests itself throughout the history of the documentary genre, prior and subsequent to the introduction of digital imaging technology; to ascertain the extent to which the Capetonian professional photographer uses digital imaging technology compared to film technology; to discover how Capetonian professional photographers perceive various concepts related to integrity in a documentary photograph; to identify what Capetonian professional photographers regard as acceptable digital editing to the photojournalistic documentary photograph; to ascertain whether Capetonian professional photographers believe that digital imaging technology impacted on the integrity of the documentary photograph; and finally, to discern whether Capetonian professional photographers who have practiced professional photojournalism see the need for a national regulating body, which clearly makes known what acceptable picture taking (in terms of content, e.g. staging of a photograph) and digital editing entails, for the South African photojournalist. The rationale for this study is that we exist in an era where we are faced with a digital revolution which transforms perceptions of integrity and it is essential to ascertain how technology influences the perceptions of the very professionals who produce documentary photography images.
The literature review evolves a context for this study. This empirical study’s data collection and analyses has a mixed-method design. The survey’s instrument of data collection is a questionnaire, which captured quantitative data and with half of one question captures qualitative data. I analysed quantitative data with the help of SPSS and I analysed qualitative data much akin to a case study. The statistical test used to analyse quantitative data is a chi-square test and there are 66 participants in the study.
I found that a breach of integrity, for instance manipulation, was always possible in the era prior to the introduction of digital imaging technology. Now it is only done faster, more thorough and more people have access to editing technology. Many who lack moral fiber are tempted now, more than ever, to illicitly manipulate. Capetonian professional photographer’s experience in digital image creation and editing technology outweighs the equivalent in the film medium. Digital camera usage takes precedence over film cameras. An example of a perception of a concept related to integrity in documentary photography is the sub-group which has practiced professional photojournalism insisted (73.5% of them strongly agreed) that it is possible to be creative and truthful at the same time in documentary photography. With regard to what acceptable editing entails, for cropping respondents favoured slight cropping; for dodging and burning in respondents favoured very light dodging and burning in; for pasting in respondents favoured no pasting in is acceptable; and for removing of objects respondents favoured no removing of objects. The Capetonian professional photographer believes that digital imaging technology has impacted on the integrity of the documentary photograph. For instance, the study has measured and proved that a majority of Capetonian professional photographers believe that a documentary essay taken in film and processed in the traditional darkroom feels more consistently trustworthy than its digital equivalent. This study has shown that there is a need for a body that clearly makes known what acceptable picture taking and digital editing entails for the professional photojournalistic photographer in South Africa.
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Social dynamics of a resistance photographer in the 1980s in Cape TownVallie, Zubeida January 2014 (has links)
Thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree
Master of Technology: Design
in the Faculty of Informatics and Design
at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology
2014 / This study seeks to contribute to the field of documentary photography by looking at a resistance photographer who documented events during the liberation struggle against Apartheid in the 1980s in Cape Town, South Africa.
The research explores the richness, depth and complexity of the reflective knowledge of the phenomenon and develops a sense of understanding of the meanings of the circumstances and social context of the researcher. It considers the thoughts, observations as well as reflections regarding the meanings and interpretations of experience as a photographer in the 1980s.
The perspective of the research is to understand through the photographer’s memory the phenomenon of interest in the exhibition Martyrs, Saints & Sell-Outs and in so doing argue for a consideration of the lives of those who not only lived during Apartheid but continue to do so after its demise.
In addition to thinking about questions of photographic representation, the study also addresses ideas of space, and unarticulated injuries and trauma. The photograph is well suited as a medium through which one may think about these difficult questions, for in its very inception, the medium is one of simultaneous absence and presence.
The study concludes with recommendations for future investigation in the documentary photography narrative in Cape Town, South Africa.
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In Ruins: Nostalgia and Melancholia in the Photographs of Yves Marchand and Romain Meffre, 2005-2013Flagg, Tracy Claire 27 October 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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Photographing Humanity in the Posthumanist Void: The US-Mexico Borderlands in the Work of Ken Gonzales-Day (b. 1964) and Krista Schlyer (b. 1971)Dawtry, Sarah-Louise J. January 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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The Farm Security Administration photographers : humane propagandists, pioneers in documentary photographyAlexander, Robert Duff 01 January 1979 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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