Mothers and the Phenomenology of the Memorable Photograph

This article explores the phenomenology of mothers as they return to memorable photographs.[i] It reviews research on three mothers who articulate the lived experience of photographs, and how such experience might reveal basic ontological aspects of motherhood.  The phenomenology of a mother’s memor...

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Main Author: Jonathan Yahalom
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Alberta 2013-07-01
Series:Phenomenology & Practice
Online Access:https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/pandpr/index.php/pandpr/article/view/20107
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spelling doaj-8fee74eec6c3410da8a8e22e8f781c202020-11-25T03:22:09ZengUniversity of AlbertaPhenomenology & Practice1913-47112013-07-017112613810.29173/pandpr2010720107Mothers and the Phenomenology of the Memorable PhotographJonathan YahalomThis article explores the phenomenology of mothers as they return to memorable photographs.[i] It reviews research on three mothers who articulate the lived experience of photographs, and how such experience might reveal basic ontological aspects of motherhood.  The phenomenology of a mother’s memorable photographs discloses an aporia of human relationships that involves the connectedness she has with her children, and the awareness that her children have become separate individuals. These two themes – separateness and coexistence – are indissolubly at odds. Each constitutes a mother’s potential lived experience of photographs as viewed in front of her. A concluding discussion reviews how each of these contradictory themes provides the necessary context for the other to arise, mutually presupposing the other. [i] The Duquesne University IRB approved the research conducted in this article (Protocol #11-27). The author would like to thank Eva Simms, Patrick Howard, and two anonymous reviewers for helpful feedback while preparing this article. This article is indebted to the three mothers who participated in this research.https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/pandpr/index.php/pandpr/article/view/20107
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jonathan Yahalom
spellingShingle Jonathan Yahalom
Mothers and the Phenomenology of the Memorable Photograph
Phenomenology & Practice
author_facet Jonathan Yahalom
author_sort Jonathan Yahalom
title Mothers and the Phenomenology of the Memorable Photograph
title_short Mothers and the Phenomenology of the Memorable Photograph
title_full Mothers and the Phenomenology of the Memorable Photograph
title_fullStr Mothers and the Phenomenology of the Memorable Photograph
title_full_unstemmed Mothers and the Phenomenology of the Memorable Photograph
title_sort mothers and the phenomenology of the memorable photograph
publisher University of Alberta
series Phenomenology & Practice
issn 1913-4711
publishDate 2013-07-01
description This article explores the phenomenology of mothers as they return to memorable photographs.[i] It reviews research on three mothers who articulate the lived experience of photographs, and how such experience might reveal basic ontological aspects of motherhood.  The phenomenology of a mother’s memorable photographs discloses an aporia of human relationships that involves the connectedness she has with her children, and the awareness that her children have become separate individuals. These two themes – separateness and coexistence – are indissolubly at odds. Each constitutes a mother’s potential lived experience of photographs as viewed in front of her. A concluding discussion reviews how each of these contradictory themes provides the necessary context for the other to arise, mutually presupposing the other. [i] The Duquesne University IRB approved the research conducted in this article (Protocol #11-27). The author would like to thank Eva Simms, Patrick Howard, and two anonymous reviewers for helpful feedback while preparing this article. This article is indebted to the three mothers who participated in this research.
url https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/pandpr/index.php/pandpr/article/view/20107
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