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[ecrea] CFP: Rethinking Early Photography
Wed Oct 15 08:46:39 GMT 2014
CFP
*Call for papers – ‘Rethinking Early Photography’
16^th -17^th June 2015, University of Lincoln*
/Keynotes/: Kate Flint, Lindsay Smith, Kelley Wilder
Attitudes to photography have undergone a radical shift in recent times.
Partly in response to these contemporary changes, historians, curators
and photographic practitioners have begun to re-examine older forms of
photography: exploring the wide variety of historical technologies and
techniques, finding surprising ways in which images were manipulated and
determining how an ideology of photographic realism was maintained. Yet
there remains a need for scholars to explore questions of early
photographic ‘authorship’, singularity and objectivity in much greater
detail.
Scholarly studies of nineteenth-century photography have been heavily
influenced by later theoretical constructions. As an alternative, Daniel
Novak has posited a ‘Victorian theory of photography’. Yet this theory
remains unelaborated. Similarly, Elizabeth Edwards and others have
called for a move away from the traditional Art History model of
analysing photography. This interdisciplinary conference will explore
the question of what such an analysis, and such a theory, might look like.
Possible questions and areas of interest for the conference include:
* How do technological narratives influence our understanding of
photography?
* Photography as a business; photographers as workers.
* The hegemony of nineteenth-century photographic realism, and
resistances to it.
* Can/should we do away with the Art History model of photography?
* Alternatives to the photographer-as-author model of photographic
exhibition and analysis.
* To what extent can we think of photography as being separate to
other print and visual media?
* The role of photography in the creation of nineteenth-century
celebrity.
* Early photography as represented in literature, art and film.
* Photographs as networks; photographs as objects.
* When does ‘early’ photography end?
* Does digital photography allow us to ‘read back’ the
performativity of images from earlier periods? How might the
revival of Victorian photographic techniques by current
practitioners influence historians?
Organisers: Owen Clayton, Jim Cheshire, and Hannah Field.
To submit proposals for 20 minute papers, please send an abstract of
200-250 words to *(rethinkingphotography /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(rethinkingphotography /at/ gmail.com)>*. The deadline is *12^th Jan
2015, 5pm (GMT)*.
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