1st Edition

Photography and the Contemporary Cultural Condition Commemorating the Present

By Peter D. Osborne Copyright 2019
    212 Pages
    by Routledge

    210 Pages
    by Routledge

    In this book, Osborne demonstrates why and how photography as photography has survived and flourished since the rise of digital processes, when many anticipated its dissolution into a generalised system of audio-visual representations or its collapse under the relentless overload of digital imagery. He examines how photography embodies, contributes to, and even in effect critiques how the contemporary social world is now imagined, how it is made present and how the concept and the experience of the Present itself is produced. Osborne bases his discussions primarily in cultural studies and visual cultural studies. Through an analysis of different kinds of photographic work in distinct contexts, he demonstrates how aspects of photography that once appeared to make it vulnerable to redundancy turn out to be the basis of its survival and have been utilised by much important photographic work of the last three decades.

    1. Commemorating the Present: Introductory Thoughts 2. The Accelerating Eye: Photographic Mobilities 3. Relocated Visions: Some Themes in the Photography of Landscape in England 1990–2007 4. The Unapproachable Light: Photography and the Sacred, Part 1 5. “Life’s Redemption”: Photography and the Sacred, Part 2 6. anredoM acitpO or Aztec Cameras: Cultural Hybridity and Latin American Photography 7. The Accidental Theorist: Three Views on the Work of Edgar Martins 8. The Damage: Photography and the Aesthetics of Fragility

    Biography

    Peter D. Osborne is Senior Lecturer in the Media Faculty of the London College of Communication, University of the Arts London, UK. He is the author of several essays on photography and culture. His book, Travelling Light—Photography, Travel and Visual Culture, was published in 2000.