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Dec 04, 2024
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Course Catalog 2020-2021 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
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ARTH 257 - Photography and Knowledge (1830-1930) This course is a social history of photography which examines how the medium shaped categories of subjectivity in the 19th century (class, gender, race, nationality, for example). We study how photographic representations were a means to archive and classify fields of knowledge. The development of photography in this period intersected with the burgeoning sciences of ethnography and anthropology, and it was used in both topographical and expeditionary surveys. Faith in photography as a document made it a powerful witness to war, urban development, colonial expansion and social inequalities. While we study the work of photography’ more well-known practitioners from Europe and North America, our approach will not emphasize the aesthetic innovations of self-consciously artistic photography. Rather, we examine both professional and domestic photography as a means to produce knowledge about the world.
Credits 1
Notes Cross-listed with FNMS 252
Area Humanities
Division Arts and Humanities
Compass Attributes Global Honors, Humanities, Structure/Power/Inequality
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