Of Stereoscopes and Instagram: Materiality, Affect, and the Senses from Analog to Digital Photography

This article addresses popular claims that photography has been “dematerialized” in the digital era. It engages a wide range of critical writings about photography from the early 19th to the 21st century to demonstrate that different versions of these claims have always formed an important part of p...

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Main Author: Fackler Katharina
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2019-01-01
Series:Open Cultural Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2019-0045
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spelling doaj-9b6b3ad8d2e14d61a19c89bc5848b8d72021-09-06T19:19:47ZengDe GruyterOpen Cultural Studies2451-34742019-01-013151953010.1515/culture-2019-0045culture-2019-0045Of Stereoscopes and Instagram: Materiality, Affect, and the Senses from Analog to Digital PhotographyFackler Katharina0Department of American Studies, University of Graz, AustriaThis article addresses popular claims that photography has been “dematerialized” in the digital era. It engages a wide range of critical writings about photography from the early 19th to the 21st century to demonstrate that different versions of these claims have always formed an important part of photography criticism. However, rather than doing justice to photographs’ materiality or their complex entanglements with what has been considered material and immaterial, human and nonhuman, they have tended to somewhat limit our understanding of the medium’s material, sensory, and affective valences. This article argues that a sustained engagement between visual culture studies, sensory studies, and the new materialisms can help us understand more fully both analog and digital photography’s contingent position within the material world, varying sensory ideologies, and different subjectivities.https://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2019-0045digital photographymaterialityphotography and the senses
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fackler Katharina
spellingShingle Fackler Katharina
Of Stereoscopes and Instagram: Materiality, Affect, and the Senses from Analog to Digital Photography
Open Cultural Studies
digital photography
materiality
photography and the senses
author_facet Fackler Katharina
author_sort Fackler Katharina
title Of Stereoscopes and Instagram: Materiality, Affect, and the Senses from Analog to Digital Photography
title_short Of Stereoscopes and Instagram: Materiality, Affect, and the Senses from Analog to Digital Photography
title_full Of Stereoscopes and Instagram: Materiality, Affect, and the Senses from Analog to Digital Photography
title_fullStr Of Stereoscopes and Instagram: Materiality, Affect, and the Senses from Analog to Digital Photography
title_full_unstemmed Of Stereoscopes and Instagram: Materiality, Affect, and the Senses from Analog to Digital Photography
title_sort of stereoscopes and instagram: materiality, affect, and the senses from analog to digital photography
publisher De Gruyter
series Open Cultural Studies
issn 2451-3474
publishDate 2019-01-01
description This article addresses popular claims that photography has been “dematerialized” in the digital era. It engages a wide range of critical writings about photography from the early 19th to the 21st century to demonstrate that different versions of these claims have always formed an important part of photography criticism. However, rather than doing justice to photographs’ materiality or their complex entanglements with what has been considered material and immaterial, human and nonhuman, they have tended to somewhat limit our understanding of the medium’s material, sensory, and affective valences. This article argues that a sustained engagement between visual culture studies, sensory studies, and the new materialisms can help us understand more fully both analog and digital photography’s contingent position within the material world, varying sensory ideologies, and different subjectivities.
topic digital photography
materiality
photography and the senses
url https://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2019-0045
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